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Preface: The Ends and Beginnings of 1992
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Tolerance, Difference, and Citizenship
2. Cosmopolitan Signs: Names as Foreign and Local
3. The Limits of Cosmopolitanism
4. Performing Difference: Turkish Jews on The National Stage
5. Intimate Negotiations: Turkish Jews Between Stages
6. The One Who Writes Difference: Inside Secrecy
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
Cosmopolitanism and Jewish identity in Istanbul
Marcy Brink-Danan is Dorot Assistant Professor of Judaic Studies and Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Brown University.
"Successfully struggles with applying anthropology to an urbanized and diverse community while deftly unravelling the dilemmas faced by Jews in Istanbul as they balance cosmopolitanism with maintaining a sense of who they are." Harvey E. Goldberg, Hebrew University "Brink-Danan, in Jewish Life in 21st-Century Turkey, ventures beyond the bland and the predictable and produces a thought-provoking book about an intriguing Jewish community in a fascinating Muslim country." - The Canadian Jewish News
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