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022_000056/0000

Competing Eyes. Visual Encounters with Alterity in Central and Eastern Europe

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Tudományterület
Antropológia, néprajz / Anthropology, ethnology (12857), Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950), Társadalomszerkezet, egyenlőtlenségek, társadalmi mobilitás, etnikumközi kapcsolatok / Social structure, inequalities, social mobility, interethnic relations (12525), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046)
Tudományos besorolás
tanulmánykötet
022_000056/0399
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022_000056/0399

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The Image of the Jewish Street Seller in Nineteenth Century London London to show how the stereotypes applying to the Jewish population were presented in nineteenth-century British prints. Everyday-Life Cartoons Illustrations showing day-to-day-life scenes played an important role in Victorian Britain. Apart from being used to illustrate novels and books, they were popular merchandise sold by street art sellers (Ibidem: 5—8). The scenes reflected the everyday experiences of the townspeople, which in nineteenth-century London, among other things, meant more of a need of coexistence with immigrants than had existed before. In the case of the Jewish population, the most common occupations were street trade (usually in used items), tailoring, shoemaking, and carpentry (Booth 1970: 52-56). Jewish merchants or tailors and their non-Jewish customers were often portrayed, and pictures showing them were used to introduce a stereotype of dishonest Jewish merchants trading with unaware Englishmen. One of the cartoons showing a scene of that kind and offering some idea on how the Jewish minority was represented in the first half of the nineteenth century is “The Razor Seller” (ill. 172)."* It is a lithograph by J. Jenkins from 1826 (catalog number AR 1168). The picture shows two figures—an Englishman dressed in a white coat and a Jewish street trader, wearing dark overalls and a furry hat. The occupation of the Jewish figure can be easily recognized based on the tray in front of him. This was a common way of dealing with legal restrictions on street trade in nineteenthcentury London—the law prohibited selling any wares from fixed stalls or tables, which could block pathways or pavements. A person not owning a shop and willing to trade goods in the streets had to be moving all the time (Mayhew 1985: 15). Therefore street merchants either carried their commodities in hand or used trays, bags, or small carts to display their wares and be able to change locations. The scene shows a quarrel between the two men. The buyer, who is clearly dissatisfied with his purchase, tries to return a razor and complains about the quality of the item. The seller smiles with an innocent look on his face, his hands spread wide as if in a gesture of total misunderstanding of the problem. In the first half of the nineteenth century Jews had a massive share of the street trade. Most of them specialized in such wares as used clothes, books, and metal objects such as razors, umbrellas, knives, and pots. The quality of the items was poor and the prices were low. A slightly different scene focusing on street trade is presented in the picture entitled “Jew-venal” (ill. 181),° by W. Heath. The scene takes place outside a large, 4 hetp://www.jewishmuseum.org.uk/search-our-collections-new?adlibid=78278offset=0 (accessed 04. 07. 2012). ' The dating of the cartoon is difficult, since the Jewish Museum Archive holds it under the very same title in two collections. In the first case under the catalog number AR1154 it is described as a piece of art from 1823 (http://www.jewishmuseum.org.uk/search-our-collections-new?adlibid=5451&offset=0 accessed 04. 07. 2012), and in the second case the catalog number is C 1986.7.12 and the date is 1835 397

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1843 px
Kép magassága
2763 px
Képfelbontás
300 px/inch
Kép eredeti mérete
1.03 MB
Permalinkből jpg
022_000056/0399.jpg
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022_000056/0399.ocr

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