Book

Communal webs: communication and culture in contemporary Israel

State University of New York PressAlbany • Published In 1991 • Pages: vi, 226

By: Katriel, Tamar.

Abstract
This monograph combines elements of Clifford Gertz's 'spider-web' metaphor theory with J. Clifford's concept of 'ethnographic surrealism' in a study of symbols and meaning in Israeli ethnography. Successive chapters in the book deal with such diverse topics as key verbal symbols (GIBUSH) in Israeli cultural semantics, KITURIM or griping as a central speech mode, a key visual symbol (fire) in Israeli youth movement ceremonials, emotion-laden semi-ritualized familial occasions (picnics in military zones), hegemonic, mass-mediated pedagogical discourses (radio for young listeners), and children's self-regulated peer group communicative exchanges (p. 1).
Subjects
Speech
Sociolinguistics
Semantics
Dissemination of news and information
Radio and television
Fire
Exchange transactions
Conversation
Social relationships and groups
Visiting and hospitality
Ingroup antagonisms
Family relationships
culture
Israelis
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Middle East
Sub Region
Middle East
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2004
Field Date
1976-1978, 1980-1984
Coverage Date
1976-1980s
Coverage Place
Israel
Notes
Tamar Katriel
Includes bibliographical references (p. 201-216) and index
LCCN
90010057
LCSH
Israelis