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The Story of the Jews: Belonging, 1492–1900

by Simon Schama

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: The Story of the Jews (2)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
385865,442 (4.18)6
The second of a three volume cultural history that details the journey of the Jewish people from 1492 through the end of the nineteenth century, incorporating the stories of many who seldom figure in Jewish histories. Through Schama's passionate and intelligent telling, a story emerges of the Jewish people that feels as if it is the story of everyone, of humanity packed with detail. -- Adapted from book jacket. "Simon Schama's great project continues and the Jewish story is woven into the fabric of humanity. Their search for a home where a distinctive religion and culture could be nourished without being marginalized suddenly takes on startling resonance in our own epoch of homelessness, wanderings, persecutions, and anxious arrivals. Volume 2 of The Story of the Jews epic tells the stories of many who seldom figure in Jewish histories: not just the rabbis and the philosophers but a poetess in the ghetto of Venice; a general in Ming China; a boxer in Georgian England, a Bible showman in Amsterdam; a teacher of the deaf in eighteenth-century France, an opera composer in nineteenth-century Germany. The story unfolds in Kerala and Mantua, the starlit hills of Galilee, the rivers of Colombia, the kitchens of Istanbul, the taverns of Ukraine and the mining camps of California. It sails in caravels, rides the stagecoaches and the railways, trudges the dawn streets of London with a pack load of old clothes, hobbles along with the remnant of Napoleon's ruined army. Through Schama's passionate and intelligent telling, a story emerges of the Jewish people that feels as if it is the story of everyone, of humanity packed with detail, this second chronicle in an epic tale will shed new light on a crucial period of history." -- Provided by publisher… (more)
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Amsterdam, Spinoza.
  BJMacauley | Aug 21, 2023 |
The second volume of the author's wide and detailed history of the Jews, his one covering the medieval to the modern periods up to the end of the 19th century. The history itself is a searing one, with a continual oppression and physical assault on the Jews and their settlements across the western and Muslim worlds. Unexpectedly, the Muslim states have proven to be less unrelenting in this than the more highly "civilised" Christian societies; these latter have held all Jews to be still answerable for the martyring of Jesus, and have fomented popular revulsion by repeating various calumnies, e.g. that Jews needed the blood of human sacrifices for their rituals. The present volume stops at the brink of a revival of a Jewish state in Palestine, and also does not cover the most horrifying of the atrocities against Jews, the Nazi genocide in mid-20th century. The account is all the more searing by eschewing any self-pity or emotionalism, reflecting the philosophical resignation to the will of God adopted historically by most of the Jews themselves. The author does not seem to be proferring any theories to explain this disproportionate propensity to violence and blood-lust in a civilisation based on a religion of forgiveness and compassion (Christianity), perhaps because of the tendency of many commentators to suggest deficiencies in the Judaic system and people themselves (which would amount to blaming the victim). Thus this volume at least does not seem to be offering us any guide to the future of the Jews, or to the directions in which the Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) should develop in the future if these deep fractures in world civilisation are to be bridged.

Finally, a bit about the style: this is not a straight chronological narrative, but is more of a literary effort. The style is dense with unfamiliar Hebrew terms, names of persons and locations, and allusions to Biblical and classical sources. As such, it appears to presume a basic familiarity with these, perhaps not unreasonable among Westerners, but a bit of an obstacle to the average reader from other parts of the world. It is also a massive work, with perhaps more details than can be absorbed at a first reading. Much of the time, the average reader may not be very clear what the author is saying or implying. However, all this does not detract from the significance and weightiness of this book, which should probably be read by anyone willing to try and understand the world today. ( )
  Dilip-Kumar | Jun 19, 2021 |
To write History as narrative isn't easy, is it?
Simon Schama writes it almost like a story...Telling stories, teaches history.

Here is a highly recommended book review from the New Yorker on March 19, 2018:

"Why Jewish History Is So Hard to Write

For Schama, Jewishness comprises anything Jews have done, in all the very different places and ways they have lived. The boxer Dan Mendoza was a Jew, and so was Esperanza Malchi, the confidante of a sixteenth-century royal consort in the Ottoman court—just as fully as canonical figures like Moses Maimonides, the medieval Jewish philosopher, or Theodor Herzl. Schama offers an appealingly democratic and humanistic approach to Jewish history. It is also a way of telling the story that focusses on the interactions of Jews with the non-Jewish cultures in which they lived. That is partly because of the nature of the surviving historical sources—Jews who became notable in the wider, Gentile world necessarily had an unusual degree of contact with that world—and partly because Schama is not very interested in religious practice and texts...

Perhaps for similar reasons, in the second volume of his epic, Schama devotes disproportionate attention to Jews living in Western Europe and the United States, who, in the early modern period, were mostly of Sephardic ancestry, and comparatively little to the Ashkenazi Jews of Eastern Europe. (The names of these two major branches of European Jewry come from the Hebrew names of their countries of origin: Ashkenaz was Germany, Sepharad was Spain.) Yet, by the nineteenth century, Eastern Europe was home to a large majority of the world’s Jews, who lived in a comprehensively Jewish society, in a way that the smaller communities of Venice or Amsterdam or Colonial America did not. The Eastern European experience fits less well into Schama’s picture of Jewish history, which emphasizes the ways Jews sought to belong—that is, to belong in Christian society. Of course, Schama uses the subtitle “Belonging” with full knowledge of its ambiguity, since it names a hope that was to be frustrated in most of Europe."

Source: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/03/26/why-jewish-history-is-so-hard-to-w... ( )
  Paul_Levine_Library | Jun 3, 2020 |
This second volume of Simon Schama's history of the Jewish people begins in the ghettos of Venice where the Jews of the Iberian peninsula had ended up after being expelled. Those that had not escaped were forced to convert and even then were still persecuted. This search for safety and somewhere to live where they could carry on with their lives in peace had been a pressing concern; and as this book explains in some detail, the theme of moving, settling, suffering and moving again, would keep repeating for the next few hundred years.

The story that Schama tells is as epic in scope as it is global. We travel with him all around Europe, into the cold of Russia, across the Atlantic to the New World of America and venture into the privileged upper-class world of the English aristocracy. He tells of those that lost children as they were conscripted into the army, those that found peace before the winds of change in Europe blew through once again, those that suffered for their faith and those that fought back. Even though this is a sweeping history of a people, he concentrates on individuals and specific events to explain the wider history the Jews.

This is a huge book, at around 800 odd pages long and Schama goes into huge amounts of detail as he tells his stories of the Jewish people. Some of it is fascinating, but there were times when I felt like I was wading through it as he expanded on the minutia as the events unfolded. It is one that I feel some sort of accomplishment having read it now. ( )
  PDCRead | Apr 6, 2020 |
Could perhaps be called "Stories of the Jews" rather than "The Story of...". Schama's approach is to tell a particular story and its context in vivid detail as always, in such a way that the moment or the era in Jewish history comes to life. for example, the Dreyfuss affair comes over superbly, told mainly from the point of view of Melies making the first ever docudrama and surrounding media storm, fake news, the lot. Sometimes the detail is a bit overdone (e.g. Herzl's sartorial obsessions) or the story is an odd choice ((e.g. not sure what the story of fighting Mendoza really illustrates). Nonetheless cumulatively we get the message. The suffering and persecution of the Jews has always been there; Hitler was just able to deploy modern organisation and technology to ramp up the numbers. some interesting patterns emerge: The Med was where Jews were able to get rich, with the Ottomans, the Venetians. The Ashkenazi mostly stayed poor until some began to emerge as HofJuden in the 18th century. The Jewish identity is many-layered and complex: for example, some of the fugitives from Spain went via Portugal, some converted or pretended to, some stayed over in Italy and absorbed Italian ways and language before arriving in Ottoman territory. Not all these strands got on together. But any and all could become subject to prejudice and persecution at the drop of a hat.

Schama narrates the first chapter of the Audible version. His nuance and enthusiasm is infectious and convincing. Pity he then hands the baton to another, who is OK, but lacks the heart. This is a personal story as much as a history book. A competent third party doesn't do it justice. ( )
  vguy | Jun 4, 2019 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Simon Schamaprimary authorall editionscalculated
Reichlin, SaulNarratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
"Poem Without and End" by Yehuda Amichai
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Moses and Frankllin who also belong to this story
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Sometime, somewhere, between Africa and Hindustan, lay a river so Jewish it observed the Sabbath
Quotations
...the lost tribes of Israel, the people who had been carried away by the conquering Assyrians in the eighth century BCE /
As far as brother [Holy Roman Emperor Charles V] and sister were concerned that's what the New Christians were: Jews once, Jews now, Jews till they burned.../
Mendoza was pleased to have himself described as an honourable man since a strong element in his entire adventure was to show his countrymen that a Jew could be a "manly" Briton too.../The China-Kerala-Netherlands connection describes a triangle of toleration where Jews could make a home without the cycles of terror that dogged them in Christian Europe
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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The second of a three volume cultural history that details the journey of the Jewish people from 1492 through the end of the nineteenth century, incorporating the stories of many who seldom figure in Jewish histories. Through Schama's passionate and intelligent telling, a story emerges of the Jewish people that feels as if it is the story of everyone, of humanity packed with detail. -- Adapted from book jacket. "Simon Schama's great project continues and the Jewish story is woven into the fabric of humanity. Their search for a home where a distinctive religion and culture could be nourished without being marginalized suddenly takes on startling resonance in our own epoch of homelessness, wanderings, persecutions, and anxious arrivals. Volume 2 of The Story of the Jews epic tells the stories of many who seldom figure in Jewish histories: not just the rabbis and the philosophers but a poetess in the ghetto of Venice; a general in Ming China; a boxer in Georgian England, a Bible showman in Amsterdam; a teacher of the deaf in eighteenth-century France, an opera composer in nineteenth-century Germany. The story unfolds in Kerala and Mantua, the starlit hills of Galilee, the rivers of Colombia, the kitchens of Istanbul, the taverns of Ukraine and the mining camps of California. It sails in caravels, rides the stagecoaches and the railways, trudges the dawn streets of London with a pack load of old clothes, hobbles along with the remnant of Napoleon's ruined army. Through Schama's passionate and intelligent telling, a story emerges of the Jewish people that feels as if it is the story of everyone, of humanity packed with detail, this second chronicle in an epic tale will shed new light on a crucial period of history." -- Provided by publisher

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