Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Tables
- Introduction
- 1 A Brief History of the Acculturation of a Jewish Community: London, 1880–1939
- 2 Public Health in London's Jewish East End, 1880–1939
- 3 Communal Networks: Taking Care of their Own and Efforts to Secure the Community's Reputation
- 4 The Impact of Education: Anglicization of Jewish East Enders Begins with Schooling
- 5 Religious Education: Conflicting Educational Views within the Jewish Community
- 6 Jewish Clubs and Settlement Houses: The Impact of Recreational Programmes on the Anglicization of East Enders
- 7 Women's and Children's Moral Health in London's East End, 1880–1939: The Making and Unmaking of Jews and ‘Jewesses’
- 8 Becoming English in the Workplace
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Introduction
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Tables
- Introduction
- 1 A Brief History of the Acculturation of a Jewish Community: London, 1880–1939
- 2 Public Health in London's Jewish East End, 1880–1939
- 3 Communal Networks: Taking Care of their Own and Efforts to Secure the Community's Reputation
- 4 The Impact of Education: Anglicization of Jewish East Enders Begins with Schooling
- 5 Religious Education: Conflicting Educational Views within the Jewish Community
- 6 Jewish Clubs and Settlement Houses: The Impact of Recreational Programmes on the Anglicization of East Enders
- 7 Women's and Children's Moral Health in London's East End, 1880–1939: The Making and Unmaking of Jews and ‘Jewesses’
- 8 Becoming English in the Workplace
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
This book explores the lives of Jewish immigrants to Britain, with a particular focus on women and children who settled in London. As home to the majority of Britain's Jews, London functioned, often to the dismay of Jews outside the metropolis, as the religious and political centre of Anglo-Jewry. In the 1880s, when the pace of Eastern European Jewish immigration quickened, immigrants entered a country with a history of many fewer restrictions than continental Europe. Britons, unlike continental Europeans, tended not ‘to mobilize public opinion against Jews as the bearers of modernity’ and overall, Victorians expressed more anti-Catholicism than anti-Semitism. The pre-existing Anglo-Jewish community boasted a comprehensive range of philanthropic services, many of which served women and children. Cultural interaction and exchange between newcomers and natives shaped three generations of Eastern European Jews. These factors contributed to a very rapid process of acculturation – one that differed from virtually every other Western Jewish community.
Definitions of acculturation and assimilation vary; for the purposes of this study, acculturation is the process of adopting ‘“the culture of another social group”’ and does not imply fully casting off of one's culture of origin. Assimilation is more extreme and involves shedding attributes of one's ‘“former culture”’. From early in the twentieth century commentators and historians have used the term ‘anglicization’, ‘the act or process by which persons learn to conform to English modes or usages, in speech, in manner, in mental attitude and in principles’, to describe Jewish immigrant acculturation.
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- Information
- Jewish Immigrants in London, 1880–1939 , pp. 1 - 14Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014