Authors
Limor Shifman, Elihu Katz
Publication date
2005/10
Journal
American Sociological Review
Volume
70
Issue
5
Pages
843-859
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
This article describes a case study of humor created in the course of immigrant assimilation, specifically regarding the jokes (n = 150) told by Eastern European oldtimers at the expense of well-bred German Jews (Yekkes) who migrated to Palestine/Israel beginning in the mid-1930s. A taxonomy divides the corpus into jokes lampooning rigidity, exaggerated deference to authority, difficulty in language acquisition, and alienation from the new society. The jokes carry a dual message of welcome to our egalitarian nation, but please note that we, and our norms, were here first. The ethnic superiority implicit in the latter part of the message turns the tables on two earlier encounters-in Germany and the United States-in which Jewish immigrants from Russia and Poland were denigrated for “embarrassing” their relatively wellestablished German brethren. The Yekke jokes analyzed in this article arose from a third encounter …
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