{"title":"奴隶社会中的犹太人自治:大西洋世界中的苏里南,1651-1825,Aviva Ben Ur(综述)","authors":"Hilit Surowitz-Israel","doi":"10.1353/wmq.2022.0033","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Aviva Ben-Ur’s Jewish Autonomy in a Slave Society: Suriname in the Atlantic World, 1651–1825 is a robust historical study of Suriname’s Jews during the colonial period. Her work, novel in its depth and methodology, adds to a growing body of scholarship on Caribbean Jews.1 Ben-Ur traces the settlement of Jews in Suriname, the establishment of the famed Jodensavanne (Jewish Savannah), and the political and social changes that the community experienced over nearly two centuries. What sets Ben-Ur’s monograph apart is her commitment to situating Jews as part of the story of the Americas. Furthermore, her focus on the community of Eurafrican Jews—who were “a distinct and separate class” (261), unlike in any other American colony—is innovative and compelling in itself and also powerfully deepens her narrative of Jewish rootedness and creolization. Suriname is an unusually rich site of inquiry in Jewish history for several reasons. Jews there were distinctive in their record keeping as “the only ethnic group outside of the nominally Dutch Reformed Protestant government who created serial records that stretch across the entire period of slavery and beyond” (16–17). Additionally, Jews constituted “one-third, and in the first half of the nineteenth century up to one-half to two-thirds, of the white population” (17), a density of Jewish population that was unusual in Europe and unique in the Americas. Finally, the Jews of colonial Suriname “were exceptional among their Atlantic coreligionists in that they admitted a significant number of Eurafricans (and, to a lesser extent, Africans) into their community and regarded them as bona fide Jews” (17).","PeriodicalId":51566,"journal":{"name":"WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY","volume":"79 1","pages":"453 - 457"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Jewish Autonomy in a Slave Society: Suriname in the Atlantic World, 1651–1825 by Aviva Ben-Ur (review)\",\"authors\":\"Hilit Surowitz-Israel\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/wmq.2022.0033\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Aviva Ben-Ur’s Jewish Autonomy in a Slave Society: Suriname in the Atlantic World, 1651–1825 is a robust historical study of Suriname’s Jews during the colonial period. Her work, novel in its depth and methodology, adds to a growing body of scholarship on Caribbean Jews.1 Ben-Ur traces the settlement of Jews in Suriname, the establishment of the famed Jodensavanne (Jewish Savannah), and the political and social changes that the community experienced over nearly two centuries. What sets Ben-Ur’s monograph apart is her commitment to situating Jews as part of the story of the Americas. Furthermore, her focus on the community of Eurafrican Jews—who were “a distinct and separate class” (261), unlike in any other American colony—is innovative and compelling in itself and also powerfully deepens her narrative of Jewish rootedness and creolization. Suriname is an unusually rich site of inquiry in Jewish history for several reasons. Jews there were distinctive in their record keeping as “the only ethnic group outside of the nominally Dutch Reformed Protestant government who created serial records that stretch across the entire period of slavery and beyond” (16–17). Additionally, Jews constituted “one-third, and in the first half of the nineteenth century up to one-half to two-thirds, of the white population” (17), a density of Jewish population that was unusual in Europe and unique in the Americas. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
Aviva Ben Ur的《奴隶社会中的犹太人自治:大西洋世界中的苏里南,1651-1825》是对殖民时期苏里南犹太人的有力历史研究。她的作品在深度和方法上都很新颖,为越来越多的关于加勒比犹太人的研究增添了新的内容。1本·乌尔追溯了犹太人在苏里南的定居、著名的犹太萨凡纳的建立,以及该社区近两个世纪来经历的政治和社会变革。本·乌尔专著的与众不同之处在于,她致力于将犹太人作为美洲故事的一部分。此外,她对欧非裔犹太人社区的关注——他们是“一个独特而独立的阶级”(261),与其他任何美国殖民地不同——本身就具有创新性和吸引力,也有力地加深了她对犹太人根深蒂固和克里奥尔化的叙述。苏里南在犹太历史上是一个异常丰富的调查地点,原因有几个。那里的犹太人在记录保存方面与众不同,他们是“名义上的荷兰改革派新教政府之外唯一一个创造了贯穿整个奴隶制时期及以后的系列记录的民族”(16-17)。此外,犹太人占“白人人口的三分之一,在19世纪上半叶高达二分之一至三分之二”(17),这种犹太人口密度在欧洲是不寻常的,在美洲也是独一无二的。最后,殖民地苏里南的犹太人“在他们的大西洋核心宗教主义者中是杰出的,因为他们接纳了大量的欧洲非洲人(以及在较小程度上的非洲人)进入他们的社区,并将他们视为真正的犹太人”(17)。
Jewish Autonomy in a Slave Society: Suriname in the Atlantic World, 1651–1825 by Aviva Ben-Ur (review)
Aviva Ben-Ur’s Jewish Autonomy in a Slave Society: Suriname in the Atlantic World, 1651–1825 is a robust historical study of Suriname’s Jews during the colonial period. Her work, novel in its depth and methodology, adds to a growing body of scholarship on Caribbean Jews.1 Ben-Ur traces the settlement of Jews in Suriname, the establishment of the famed Jodensavanne (Jewish Savannah), and the political and social changes that the community experienced over nearly two centuries. What sets Ben-Ur’s monograph apart is her commitment to situating Jews as part of the story of the Americas. Furthermore, her focus on the community of Eurafrican Jews—who were “a distinct and separate class” (261), unlike in any other American colony—is innovative and compelling in itself and also powerfully deepens her narrative of Jewish rootedness and creolization. Suriname is an unusually rich site of inquiry in Jewish history for several reasons. Jews there were distinctive in their record keeping as “the only ethnic group outside of the nominally Dutch Reformed Protestant government who created serial records that stretch across the entire period of slavery and beyond” (16–17). Additionally, Jews constituted “one-third, and in the first half of the nineteenth century up to one-half to two-thirds, of the white population” (17), a density of Jewish population that was unusual in Europe and unique in the Americas. Finally, the Jews of colonial Suriname “were exceptional among their Atlantic coreligionists in that they admitted a significant number of Eurafricans (and, to a lesser extent, Africans) into their community and regarded them as bona fide Jews” (17).