Nearly a quarter of the population of Budapest at the fin de siècle was Jewish. This demographic fact appears startling primarily because of its virtual absence from canonical histories of the city.Famed for its cosmopolitan culture and vibrant nightlife; Budapest owed much to its Jewish population. Indeed; it was Jews who helped shape the city's complex urban modernity between 1867 and 1914. Yet these contributions were often unacknowledged; leading to a metaphoric; if not literal; invisible status for many of Budapest's Jews.In the years since; particularly between the wars; anti-Semites within and outside Budapest sought to further erase Jewish influences in the city. Appellations such as the "sinful city" and "Judapest" left a toxic inheritance that often inhibited serious conversation or scholarly research on the subject.Into this breach strides Mary Gluck; whose goal is no less than to retrieve the lost contours of Jewish Budapest. She delves into the popular culture of the city's coffee houses; music halls; and humor magazines to uncover the enormous influence of assimilated Jews in creating modernist Budapest. She explores the paradox of this culture; which was Jewish-identified yet lacked a recognizable Jewish face. Because much of the Jewish population embraced and promoted a secular; metropolitan culture; their influence as Jews was both profound and invisible.
#753290 in Books 1998-07-06Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x 1.50 x 6.00l; 1.90 #File Name: 0299153142632 pages
Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Fantastic research; albeit somewhat unorthodox; by author's own admission. Very interesting views of Aymara daily / ritual life.By Steven A. MazeI am grateful for the 'fully embedded' approach the author took in giving us this journalistic view of the Aymara people. A U.S. citizen; I lived in Bolivia for the nine years prior to the authors work--his fieldwork beginning in nineteen seventy-nine.The book is systematically divided into three categories. The first is the author's narrative as he first approach the Aymara peoples. This section glosses over the details and instead lets us come to know the author; his expressed motives; and the technical; and sometimes physical hurtles; he encountered as he began the process of embedding himself.The second section is a detailed account of the whole of the written histories as viewed from the colonialist and Catholic Church records. These go back as early as the sixteenth century and help to paint one aspect of the memory of the Aymara.The third section uncovers the clandestine rituals and public and private festivals and their importance in serving as mnemonic methods of recalling oral tradition--Aymara versions of "what really happened" and their relation through timespace to pacha (universe).This book has given me welcomed insight needed to fill in the blanks in my own comprehension of the rituals and customs that surrounded me as a young boy. His work is meticulously documented; and his helpful glossary of Aymara terms rounds out the great research. The book paints a very beautiful but sometimes unsettling picture of the Aymara culture.5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Excellent read on indigenous world-viewsBy A readerTwo important elements of social "habit memory" processes strike me in Pathways of Memory and Power. The first is the apparent ease with which the colonial power asserted its program for "social amnesia" through a physical restructuring of social space (rectilinear; functional living spatial constructions) and time (the marking of Church calendrical and daily time; basically obliterating indigenous conceptions of time). The second is the reinterpretation of public and private to suit a colonial "moral code" based on the ritual performances of excessive drinking and bloodletting. These systematic; institutionalized policies effectively dismantled the indians' social habit-memories-replacing them with new ones modeled on Castilian life.The long-standing issue of religious syncretism is (thankfully) questioned; through an understanding of how the indigenous people create distinctions between the "more Christian" and "more Andean" aspects of their deities and religions. The quipu system of knotting preserves a physical remembering which was transformed; but not destroyed; by Christianity. As Abercrombie states; "the techniques may have remained the same; but the content; the memories; were changing" (p. 260). The "imagenes de bulto;" which were introduced by colonial priests; replaced the indigenous idols with Catholic saints; and initiated a long process of revisionist iconography for the indians from one source to another. The llama; as an animal that closely (to the indians) resembled humans in their social interactions; acted as a replacement for the human sacrificial victim; this helped ease the sacrificial rituals into a more acceptable Christian realm of possibilities. The origin myth; with its "multiple; not unique" origins was contentious; although re-reading and appropriating the Christ-like image of Tunupa; and the "great flood" and "tower of Babel" stories; led to a deeper understanding by colonial powers in the religion of their subjugated workers.The historical grounding in colonial documents led to a deeper; richer; fuller picture of present-day ethnography. I think this method serves to illuminate so many elements in everyday life that seem otherwise "meaningless" or where pre-literate peoples have not developed a "linear" sense of history; as their colonizers encouraged. The ability to recreate; from historical documents; a more complete view of indigenous concepts about space; time; self; and history; is invaluable. It strikes me as a process of reading "through" (not between) the lines of the colonial texts-into the minds of the colonizers-in a way that is instructive in both the development of colonial systems for creation of dominant ideologies; and how the indigenous people actual recreated their colonizers through an adaptation of their habit-memories into a new (world) context.