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I had an experience last week that threw into even sharper relief the contradictions of caricature and irony found in the insider vs outsider use of Jewish stereotypes.
I was in Florence for a very interesting and wide-ranging conference on representations of Jews in European popular culture, organized by young scholars at the European University Institute in nearby Fiesole.
Before the official start of the conference, a group of us visited Florence's synagogue and the Jewish museum housed in its women's gallery. The synagogue is a stately Moorish-style structure with an ornate interior and towering green dome. A grandiose symbol of Jewish emancipation, it was designed by the architects Marco Treves, Mariano Falcini and Vincenzo Micheli and inaugurated in 1882.
The Jewish museum is on two levels -- the lower level is mainly a display of Judaica. The upper level was revamped and reopened last year as a multi-media history exhibit using objects, panels, sound and projected images to tell the story of the Jewish community in Florence.
After visiting the museum, I stopped in the gift shop (I love museum gift shops.) It's small, but has a lot on offer -- jewelry, ritual objects, stationery, etc. All seemed rather expensive, but, with Hanukkah gifts on my mind, I found a nice little pair of earrings for €15.
I wanted to get another piece, apparently made by the same designer. The saleswoman showed me a pendant -- for €20.
I didn't want to spend that much, I told her. Her response was immediate. "What would you like to pay? How much do you want to spend?"
Well, the earrings were only €15 -- I didn't want to spend more than that.
"OK -- €15 -- the pendant is yours!"
Damn, I thought. She gave me 1/4 off, just like that. I could have got it for less!
Then I thought about the last place I had come into contact with a reference to bargaining in a Jewish context -- the "At the Golden Rose" cafe in L'viv, where no prices were put on the menu so that patrons could haggle ("like Jews") as to what they would pay...
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As for the conference -- I will try to write something on it later. For now, you can see the program by clicking HERE.
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Sunday, November 30, 2008
Florence -- Haggling in the Synagogue
I had an experience last week that threw into even sharper relief the contradictions of caricature and irony found in the insider vs outsider use of Jewish stereotypes.
I was in Florence for a very interesting and wide-ranging conference on representations of Jews in European popular culture, organized by young scholars at the European University Institute in nearby Fiesole.
Before the official start of the conference, a group of us visited Florence's synagogue and the Jewish museum housed in its women's gallery. The synagogue is a stately Moorish-style structure with an ornate interior and towering green dome. A grandiose symbol of Jewish emancipation, it was designed by the architects Marco Treves, Mariano Falcini and Vincenzo Micheli and inaugurated in 1882.
The Jewish museum is on two levels -- the lower level is mainly a display of Judaica. The upper level was revamped and reopened last year as a multi-media history exhibit using objects, panels, sound and projected images to tell the story of the Jewish community in Florence.
After visiting the museum, I stopped in the gift shop (I love museum gift shops.) It's small, but has a lot on offer -- jewelry, ritual objects, stationery, etc. All seemed rather expensive, but, with Hanukkah gifts on my mind, I found a nice little pair of earrings for €15.
I wanted to get another piece, apparently made by the same designer. The saleswoman showed me a pendant -- for €20.
I didn't want to spend that much, I told her. Her response was immediate. "What would you like to pay? How much do you want to spend?"
Well, the earrings were only €15 -- I didn't want to spend more than that.
"OK -- €15 -- the pendant is yours!"
Damn, I thought. She gave me 1/4 off, just like that. I could have got it for less!
Then I thought about the last place I had come into contact with a reference to bargaining in a Jewish context -- the "At the Golden Rose" cafe in L'viv, where no prices were put on the menu so that patrons could haggle ("like Jews") as to what they would pay...
-----
As for the conference -- I will try to write something on it later. For now, you can see the program by clicking HERE.
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2008
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November
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- Ukraine -- Virtual History and Reconstruction of G...
- Florence -- Haggling in the Synagogue
- Germany -- Forgotten Jewish Modernist Architects a...
- Amsterdam -- No More Anne Frank Apartment
- Moldova -- The "Other Europeans" project on the road
- Kukup Island - The Red Mangrove Island, Johor
- Playing with Stereotypes -- Brokeback Dreidel
- Bartholomew's Notes on Christian Philo-Semitism
- The OTHER Side of the Coin
- Kukup Trip - Day 2
- Dinner at Kukup (Day 1)
- My latest Ruthless Cosmopolitan column -- "Living ...
- Kukup Fishing Village Trip 15th & 16th November 2008
- Budapest -- Bob Cohen on Kadar eatery and other fa...
- Lien Hoe Complex on Fire! Taman Sentosa, Johor Bahru
- Anne Frank Apartment -- Action Being Taken
- Firefly at Kota Tinggi, Johor.
- Destruction of the Memory of Jewish Presence in Ea...
- Amsterdam -- "Anne Frank" apartment: talk about po...
- Riverside Restaurant, Kota Tinggi, Johor
- New National Geographic Book to Which I Contributed
- Poland -- AFP Story on Jewish Heritage in Danger f...
- Ukraine -- Jewish Tour Guide in L'viv
- Warsaw -- Exhibition Planned on Misused Jewish Tom...
- Ukraine -- Link to Historic Pictures from Zhovkva
- New Jewish Museum in Germany
- Rome -- New Kosher Wine Bar
- Ukraine -- On Its Crumbling Jewish Heritage
- Ukraine -- Old Picture of Galich Karaite neighborh...
- Ukraine -- Restoration Works on the Synagogue in Z...
- Photo Of The Day #2
- Krakow versus L'viv, Sam's view
- Ukraine -- More of On the Road
- Spain -- Construction on Site of Ancient Toledo Je...
- Hike on Mountain (Gunung) Panti, Kota Tinggi, Johor.
- Ukraine -- Ber of Bolechow's Tomb (and more)
- Barcelona: Zakhor Jewish Heritage Organization web...
- Ukraine -- L'viv Conference and Travel
- Jewish Hungary brochure -- online
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