1. The empire reforms. The community response; 2. Militarizing the Jew. Judaizing the military; 3. 'Let the children come to me': Jewish minors in the Cantonist battalions; 4. Universal draft and the singular Jews; 5. The Russian army's Jewish question; 6. The revolutionary draft; 7. Banished from modernity.
This book examines the experience of the Jews who served in the Russian Army between 1827 and 1917.
Yohanan Petrovsky-Shtern teaches early modern, modern and east European Jewish history and culture at Northwestern University. He is the author of The Anti-Imperial Choice: The Making and Unmaking of the Ukrainian Jew (forthcoming). He has also published about forty scholarly essays in journals such as East European Jewish Affairs, Jewish Social History, Journal of Jewish History, Jewish Quarterly Review, AJS Review, POLIN, KRITIKA, Ab Imperio, and The Ukrainian Quarterly. He has been a Fellow at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University, a Rothschild Fellow in Jerusalem, a Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Jerusalem, a Sensibar Visiting Professor at Spertus College in Chicago, a Visiting Scholar at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, and a recipient of multiple fellowships and grants, including the National Endowment for Humanities.
'Jews in the Russian Army is a bold, original, and provocative work
that challenges deep-seated assumptions about Russian-Jewish
history. By presenting the military as a transformative force no
less significant than education, religious reform or revolutionary
politics, Petrovsky-Shtern has established a framework for the
study of Jewish modernity that extends beyond East Europe to
include modern Jewish history as a whole.' Derek J. Penslar,
University of Toronto, and author of Shylock's Children: Economics
and Jewish Identity in Modern Europe
'A work of first-rate scholarship, Petrovsky-Shtern's important new
book splendidly fuses military history with the study of empire to
provide fascinating insights into the complicated Russian-Jewish
encounter.' David Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, Brock
University
'In many ways Jews in the Russian Army represents a welcome
revision to the traditional interpretation of Jewish military
service in the Russian army. Petrovsky-Shtern demonstrates
convincingly that the Russian military was not united as an
institution in its revulsion toward the Jews.' Revolutionary
Russia
'Jews in the Russian Army draws on an immense range of published
and unpublished sources in multiple languages.' The Journal of
Interdisciplinary History
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