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This article describes the results of field research into religious Jewry of St. Petersburg. I analyze biographies of Modern Orthodox and Hasids of Lubavitcher traditions (or the Chabads as they call themselves), who in the aftermath of the Soviet Union’s disintegration in the 1990s chose observance as their self-identity and lifestyle. The paper is aimed at answering the following questions: how do modern Jewish identities differ from one another among the St.Petersburg observant Jewry raised in non-religious families and Soviet schools? How do they coordinate their collective identity with other Jewish communities around the world? To conceptualize my research, I have used Giddens and Beck’s theories of modernity, while my methodology draws on the use of biography and biographical narrative in ethnographic studies. I argue that individual reflexivity gained new importance for both Modern Orthodox Jews and the Chabads in the post-Soviet religious liberation and the arrival of new religious influences. Howeve
Язык оригиналаанглийский
Страницы (с-по)159-178
Число страниц19
ЖурналTranscultural Studies: A Journal in Interdisciplinary Research
Номер выпуска12
СостояниеОпубликовано - 2016
Событие15th Annual Aleksanteri Conference Culture and russian society 21 - 23 October 2015, University of Helsinki, Finland - Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki and Finnish Centre of Excellence in Russian Studies - Choices of Russian Modernisation, Хельсинки, Финляндия
Продолжительность: 21 окт 201523 окт 2015
http://www.helsinki.fi/aleksanteri/conference2015/

    Предметные области Scopus

  • Социальные науки (все)

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