About this Event
Yemeni Jewish migration to Palestine/Israel began as early as the 1880s and continued until recent years. Throughout this period, Yemeni Jews employed strategies to maintain connected with Yemen, and to resist assimilation, while also working to integrate into Jewish society in Palestine and Israel. This lecture uses Yemeni Jewish foodways, music and dance to consider the ways that diasporic communities use cultural practices to negotiate the contradictory pressures migration places on identity.
Ari Ariel is an Associate Professor of Instruction in History and International Studies at the University of Iowa. His work focuses on Jewish communities in the Arab world and Mizrahi communities in Israel, and he is particularly interested in the impact of migration on foodways and other cultural practices.
This talk is a part of the Jews in the World of Islam Lecture Series.
Sponsored by:Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Islamic Studies Initiative
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Glickman Conference Center, Patton Hall (RLP) 1.302B, Patton Hall (RLP) 1.302E, Austin, United States
USD 0.00