The spatial analysis offered by the volume uses the concept of "virtuality" as a starting point, thereby engaging anew with spatial concepts laid out by scholars in the 1990s. Now, 30 years later, prompted by today's political, social, and cultural European landscape, as well as the increasing role of digitization, the authors discuss the meaning of "virtuality" and how it relates to notions of "authenticity" and "reality" in Jewish culture and in Jewish/non-Jewish relations. As such, the book provides a fresh take on and a new way forward for the conceptualizations and applications of "space", which together offer particularly useful avenues to access power relations, identity (re-)constructions, and performative aspects of the European Jewish experience.
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