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  Off and on stage interactions: Muslim-Jewish encounter in urban Europe

Gidley, B., Everett, S. S., Druez, E., Ebbiary, A., Emmerich, A., Peretz, D., et al. (2024). Off and on stage interactions: Muslim-Jewish encounter in urban Europe. Ethnicities, OnlineFirst, 0-0. doi:10.1177/14687968241292653.

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Emmerich_2024_OffAndOn.pdf (Publisher version), 608KB
 
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 Creators:
Gidley, Ben, Author
Everett, Samuel Sami, Author
Druez, Elodie, Author
Ebbiary, Alyaa, Author
Emmerich, Arndt1, Author                 
Peretz, Dekel2, Author                 
Shaw, Daniella, Author
Affiliations:
1Guests and External Members, MPI for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Max Planck Society, ou_2404691              
2Socio-Cultural Diversity, MPI for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Max Planck Society, ou_1116555              

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Free keywords: Jewish-Muslim encounters, entrepreneurs of encounter, interfaith, religious diversity
 Abstract: Drawing on ethnographic and interview-based research in six cities (Berlin and Frankfurt in Germany, London and Manchester in the UK and Paris and Strasbourg in France), this article explores intercultural, interethnic and interreligious encounter as exemplified by Jewish-Muslim interaction. We look at three sites across the cities: “staged” encounters which take place in formal interfaith and municipal settings, and “unstaged” encounters in public and commercial spaces, both often relying on the role of key “entrepreneurs of encounter”, who tend to occupy liminal or marginal spaces in relation to their ascribed identities. We show that the texture and the possibilities (and sometimes impossibility) of encounters are structured intersectionally (crucially by class and by generation), and shaped by patterns of insecurity and securitisation and by different available discursive repertoires and cognitive frames (produced at supra-national, national, local and micro-local levels – e.g. Israel/Palestine politics, laïcité or communitarianism, city narratives and neighbourhood identities respectively). Although insecurity, securitisation, policy panic and geopolitical pressures can block meaningful encounter, emerging transdiasporic cultural formations point towards some fragile resources for hope.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2024-11-29
 Publication Status: Published online
 Pages: 20
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 Table of Contents: -
 Rev. Type: Peer
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1177/14687968241292653
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Title: Ethnicities
Source Genre: Journal
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: OnlineFirst Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 0 - 0 Identifier: -