女王忠诚的“其他人”——大都会犹太和天主教等级制度、社区出版社和1897年钻石禧纪念

IF 0.9 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY
D. Renshaw
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文通过1897年夏维多利亚女王登基庆典的镜头,考察了19世纪末英国犹太人和天主教徒接受、拒绝和歧视的经历。文章认为,英国犹太人和英国天主教在银禧纪念时创造的等级话语揭示了少数族裔领导人持续感到的深刻不安全感,文章将剖析围绕银禧纪念事件创造的各种“故事”,特别是在伦敦。它将反过来考虑叙事是如何产生的,强调维多利亚作为解放者的个人角色;等级制度如何重视少数民族社区的不同人口结构,表现出适当的“英语”阶级角色;以及这种叙事是如何复杂的——首先是爱尔兰民族主义和移民犹太激进主义,其次是更广泛的英国当权派的偏见。最终,它将辩称,禧年事件揭示了犹太和天主教团体继续被排除在英国统治阶级之外,反天主教宗派主义和反犹太主义不仅是针对工人阶级社区的经济歧视和身体暴力,也是对更繁荣的犹太人和天主教徒的微妙偏见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Queen’s Loyal ‘Others’ –the Metropolitan Jewish and Catholic Hierarchies, the Communal Press and the Diamond Jubilee of 1897
ABSTRACT This article examines the Jewish and Catholic experience of acceptance, rejection and discrimination in late nineteenth-century Britain through the lens of the celebrations of Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee in the summer of 1897. Arguing that the Anglo-Jewish and English Catholic hierarchical discourses created at the time of the Jubilee reveal the continuing profound insecurities felt by the minority leaderships, the article will dissect the various ‘stories’ created around the events of the Jubilee, particularly in London. It will consider in turn how narratives were created stressing Victoria’s personal role of liberator; how a premium was placed by the hierarchies on the different demographic strands of the minority communities behaving in aropriate ‘English’ class roles; and how this narrative was complicated – first by Irish nationalism and migrant Jewish radicalism, and secondly by the prejudices of the wider British establishment. Ultimately it will contend that the events of the Jubilee revealed a continued exclusion of Jewish and Catholic groups from the British ruling class, and that anti-Catholic sectarianism and antisemitism was not solely a matter of economic discrimination and physical violence against working-class communities, but also subtler forms of prejudice against more prosperous Jews and Catholics.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Immigrants & Minorities, founded in 1981, provides a major outlet for research into the history of immigration and related studies. It seeks to deal with the complex themes involved in the construction of "race" and with the broad sweep of ethnic and minority relations within a historical setting. Its coverage is international and recent issues have dealt with studies on the USA, Australia, the Middle East and the UK. The journal also supports an extensive review section.
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