Forging National Belonging: Transformation, Visibility, and Dress in the German-Jewish Youth Movement Blau-Weiss, 1912–1927
-
Published:2023-06-13
Issue:3
Volume:56
Page:357-379
-
ISSN:0008-9389
-
Container-title:Central European History
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Cent Eur Hist
Abstract
AbstractLooking at Blau-Weiss as the first Zionist youth movement in Germany between 1912 and 1927, the article examines the role of dress in expressing new feelings of national belonging as “Jewish” in modern Germany. Drawing on publications of the movement, memoirs, and photographs, the article shows how Blau-Weiss members tried to become visible as Jews while at the same time trying to copy the dress codes of the nationalist German youth movement Wandervogel. It further shows how, after the First World War, Blau-Weiss tried to forge their own way of Zionist dressing. The article argues that it was not the actual clothes worn or the perception of others that was most crucial to the creation of a national Jewish identity, but rather the inner function that reflections and debates on dress had for Blau-Weiss members in forging and redefining their feelings of belonging and identification as Zionist Jews in Germany.
Funder
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference35 articles.
1. (Uni)forming youth: girl guides and boy scouts in Britain, 1908-39
2. Three Generations of German Zionism;Reinharz;Jerusalem Quarterly,1978