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Cluster Practice

Drawing on a variety of methods from cultural studies, history and ethnology, research in the Practice cluster focuses on both the everyday realm – such as home furnishings, clothing, personal care or nutrition – and the festive realm (ritual objects, wedding dresses, Rosh Hashanah cards, etc.). The research examines how the relationship between the Jewish diaspora and its environment is expressed in the ways in which Jews produced and consumed objects in accordance with the spirit of particular times and regions. In what ways did objects (not) contribute to reinforcing the regional identities of Jews in the 19th and 20th centuries? How could objects become reliable anchors to bridge historical and biographical ruptures caused by migration and exile?

The cluster will focus on the production, use and reuse of objects, thus concentrating on everyday and non-everyday uses of these objects, while examining changes in their use in the context of modernity. Emphasis will be placed on embodied practices (Kirshenblatt-Gimblett 2005) in order to consider the sensory, affective and gender-historical dimensions of routines in object use.

A close examination of the diverse practices of object use and reuse allows for a critical inquiry beyond essentializing notions of “Jewish objects” into the processes of appropriation, modification, and translation of practices and meanings. Drawing on Michel de Certeau, the cluster is interested in “tactics” that often undermine the intentions of the producers of certain objects, revealing consumption as an active practice in which objects are altered by the actions of various agents, while at the same time creating affiliations through using the use of objects (Möhring 2012; Schrire 2023).

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Postcard from the Josef and Margit Judaica Postcard Collection

(Photo: The Folklore Research Center, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

Research Projects

  • Project: Materializing Memory and Sanctifying Place – Jewish Sephardic Heritage in Contemporary Spain

    Researcher: Tamar Ben Shlomo

    Supervision: Dani Schrire, Enrico Lucca

  • Project: Threads of Identity – The Evolution of Israeli Fashion and the Attempt to Create a National Dress

    Researcher: Liraz Cohen Mordechai

    Supervision: Dani Schrire, Maren Möhring

  • Project: Corresponding with history – Jewish Postage Stamp Collectors and Jewish Emancipation

    Researcher: Carolin Heymann-Serota

    Supervision: Maren Möhring, Dani Schrire

  • Project: Texting Boundaries – Postcards and Postcarding Practices on the Verge

    Researcher: Noa Miro

    Supervision: Dani Schrire, Maren Möhring

  • Project: Matters of Presence – Conservation and the Afterlives of Jewish Objects

    Researcher: Shlomit Strutti

    Supervision: Dani Schrire, Tanja Zimmermann

Supervisors

  • Maren Möhring

    Professor for Comparative Cultural and Social History of Modern Europe, Leipzig University

  • Dani Schrire

    Senior lecturer affiliated to the Program in Folklore and Folk-Culture Studies (Head) and the Program in Cultural Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem