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  • Crypto-Jews History 1500-1800  (1)
  • Crypto-Jews Identity  (1)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Paths to Modernity; a Tribute to Yosef Kaplan.
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2018) 85-119
    Keywords: Sephardim History ; Crypto-Jews History 1500-1800 ; Jews Identity 1500- ; History
    Abstract: Premodern Jewish culture was a comprehensive way of life, not a “religion” called “Judaism.” In this analysis, I endeavor to de-naturalize the idea of “Judaism” that has long been entrenched as a descriptor of Jews and of “crypto-Jewish” conversos. As I will explain, the concept of “Judaism” and all it conveyed are things that Iberian Jews adopted and their New Christian and New Jewish descendants internalized over centuries as Ibero-Christian culture encroached upon, and in the case of conversos, enveloped their lives.
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  • 2
    Article
    Article
    In:  Religious Changes and Cultural Transformations in the Early Modern Western Sephardic Communities (2019) 3-21
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2019
    Titel der Quelle: Religious Changes and Cultural Transformations in the Early Modern Western Sephardic Communities
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2019) 3-21
    Keywords: Crypto-Jews History ; Crypto-Jews Identity ; Jews Identity ; Sephardim History
    Abstract: Relates to the identity of Crypto-Jews from the period of the mass conversions of 1391 and onward - in Spain, and in the early modern period in the “Western Sephardic diaspora”, with a focus on the late 16th-17th centuries. Examines how both Jews and Christians viewed the status and the identity of the "Judeoconversos", and how they viewed themselves in relation to the Christian society in Iberia and to the Western European Jewish communities and the Christian communities to which a large number emigrated. Takes issue with historiographers up to the present, who tend to identify these "Judeoconversos" as Jews or Christians, rather than as a separate entity of their own, who did not identify with Western Jewry nor with Christianity. Eventually, they comprised the Sephardi world.
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