Migration in the Joseph Narrative: Integration, Separation, and Transnationalism

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Safwat Marzouk
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract:Building on recent scholarship that reads the Joseph narrative (Genesis 37–50) as a Diaspora narrative, this essay seeks to unpack some of the cross-cultural relations between the migrant agents (Joseph and his brothers) and the host community (the Egyptians). The essay focuses on the cross-cultural matrices of integration, separation, and transnationality. These relationships between the migrant and the host communities is shaped by the openness of the host community and the ability of the migrants to negotiate power with the existing social and economic systems of their country of destination. Through a close reading of Genesis 41; 46:31–37:4, and 50:1–14, and by way of drawing insights from sociological studies of migration, I will show not only that the Joseph narrative advocates that life can be prosperous in the Diaspora, but also that the Joseph narrative suggests that integration into a foreign country is possible, and it can happen while forming a distinct identity, which in turn allows for the migrant community to live in a transnational mode, that is, it integrates into the host community, while maintaining ties with its home culture.
约瑟夫叙事中的移民:融合、分离与跨国主义
摘要:基于最近将约瑟叙事(创世记37-50章)解读为散居叙事的学术研究,本文试图揭示移民代理人(约瑟和他的兄弟们)与收容社区(埃及人)之间的一些跨文化关系。本文主要探讨融合、分离和跨国的跨文化矩阵。移民和收容社区之间的这些关系是由收容社区的开放性和移民与目的地国现有社会和经济制度谈判权力的能力所决定的。通过仔细阅读创世纪41章;46:31-37:4和50:1-14,通过从移民的社会学研究中获得见解,我将展示约瑟夫的叙述不仅主张散居的生活可以繁荣,而且约瑟夫的叙述表明融入外国是可能的,它可以在形成独特身份的同时发生,这反过来又允许移民社区以跨国模式生活,也就是说,它融入了东道国社区,同时保持与本土文化的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Hebrew Studies
Hebrew Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
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