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@article{ Mashal2009,
 title = {Governing through educational discourse: the case of integration in Israel, 1970-1973},
 author = {Mashal, Tali Yariv},
 journal = {Federal Governance},
 number = {1},
 pages = {1-25},
 volume = {6},
 year = {2009},
 issn = {1923-6158},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-46939-2},
 abstract = {Issues of ethnicity, culture, and national identity have been central in every political and social circle in Israel since the first days of the Zionist movement. The “new Jew,” a term created and lionized by the Zionist movement at the end of the 19th century, shadowed Israeli society and remained a critical part of the struggle for national identity and unity in the State of Israel after its independence in 1948. This Jew was to be a white, educated, westernized citizen, involved in both political and social processes, knowledgeable in the terms of the Western world. The concepts of the new Israeli-Jew completely ignored the fact that since the first days of the Zionism movement, the Middle Eastern Jew, born, raised and significantly involved in Arab countries, was a notable part of it and of the process of building the Jewish state of Israel. (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {Israel; Israel; nationale Identität; national identity; kulturelle Identität; cultural identity; kollektive Identität; collective identity; Nationalismus; nationalism; kulturelle Integration; cultural integration; politische Bildung; political education; politisches Handeln; political action; Zionismus; zionism; Staatenbildung; state formation; historische Entwicklung; historical development; Nahost; Middle East}}