Affect, ethnic boundaries and social mobility: transforming identities in the acculturation of Ashkenazi immigrants in Israel

IF 1.2 Q3 SOCIOLOGY Emotions and Society Pub Date : 2022-10-18 DOI:10.1332/263169022x16633243305661
R. Leshem, Rakefet Sela-Sheffy
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study investigates how affects – uncontrollable feelings that tacitly influence humans – transform, rather than reify, intergroup relations. Taking immigrant families as a case in point, we explore the role of circulating identity-affects in shaping ethnoclass identifications and boundaries over time. Proceeding from the prevailing (Jewish-sector) identity discourse in Israel, where ethnic categories (Ashkenazi vs. Mizrahi) still frame a major culture-class divide, we analyse the affects produced by those who are regarded as the mainstream – the Ashkenazim. Given the common identification of Ashkenazi immigrants, including those of lower and lower-middle class, with the Israeli ruling class, their gradual acculturation experience and social ascent have been under-researched. Addressing this lacuna, we examine these families’ changing emotion discourse from an intergenerational perspective, to uncover phases of their integration. The analysis is based on 53 interviews with individuals in three generations of Ashkenazi families (the first generation arrived after the Second World War). Using nuanced discourse and conversation analysis, we trace changing affective patterns in these individuals’ emotion talk, corresponding with their upward mobility. Two conflicting affects shape Ashkenazi identities from the second generation onwards: counteracting the first generation’s tacit racism, coupled with intensifying class elitism towards the Mizrahim. Ethnoclass boundaries persist, yet not as a static, seemingly ‘natural’ inter-ethnic animosity. Rather, they are constructed and reconstructed through the interplay between transforming affects, conducive to the different generations’ identity and status formation as native Israelis and middle-class members.
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情感、种族边界和社会流动:以色列德系犹太人移民文化适应中的身份转变
这项研究调查了情感——隐性影响人类的无法控制的情感——是如何改变而不是具体化群体间关系的。以移民家庭为例,我们探讨了随着时间的推移,流动的身份影响在形成种族阶级认同和界限方面的作用。从以色列盛行的(犹太部门)身份话语出发,在那里,种族类别(阿什肯纳兹语与米兹拉希语)仍然构成了一个主要的文化阶级分歧,我们分析了那些被视为主流的人——阿什肯纳齐主义所产生的影响。鉴于阿什肯纳兹移民(包括中低阶层移民)与以色列统治阶级的共同认同,他们逐渐适应文化的经历和社会地位的提升一直没有得到充分的研究。为了填补这一空白,我们从代际的角度审视了这些家庭不断变化的情感话语,以揭示他们融合的各个阶段。该分析基于对三代阿什肯纳兹人家庭(第一代是在第二次世界大战后出生的)的53次采访。通过细致入微的话语和对话分析,我们追踪了这些人情感对话中不断变化的情感模式,这些模式与他们的向上流动性相对应。从第二代开始,两种相互冲突的影响塑造了阿什肯纳兹人的身份:对抗第一代人的隐性种族主义,再加上对米兹拉希姆人的阶级精英主义加剧。种族阶级界限依然存在,但并不是一种静态的、看似“自然”的种族间仇恨。相反,它们是通过转变影响之间的相互作用而构建和重建的,有利于不同世代作为土生土长的以色列人和中产阶级成员的身份和地位形成。
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CiteScore
2.10
自引率
7.70%
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0
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