Ruth Behar

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Ruth Behar
Ruth Behar.jpg
Born 1956
Cuba
Nationality American
Fields Cultural Anthropology
Institutions University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Alma mater Princeton University
Wesleyan University

Ruth Behar (born 1956) is a Cuban-American anthropologist and writer.[1] Her work includes academic studies, as well as poetry, memoir, and literary fiction. As an anthropologist, she has argued for the open adoption and acknowledgement of the subjective nature of research and participant-observers.

Life and work

Behar was born in Havana, Cuba in 1956 to a Jewish-Cuban family of Sephardic Turkish, and Ashkenazi Polish and German ancestry. She was four when her family immigrated to the US following Fidel Castro's gaining power in the revolution of 1959. More than 94% of Cuban Jews left the country at that time.,[2] together with many others of the middle and upper classes. Behar attended local schools and studied as an undergraduate at Wesleyan University, receiving her B.A. in 1977. She studied cultural anthropology at Princeton University, earning her doctorate in 1983.

She travels regularly to Cuba and Mexico to study aspects of culture, as well as to investigate her family's roots in Jewish Cuba. She has specialized in studying the lives of women in developing societies.[3] Since 1991 her research and writing have largely focused on her native country, Cuba, which she left at the age of four; her parents had family that had been there since the 1920s. Her research on the dwindling Jewish community in Cuba is also the focus of her film, Adio Kerida (2002). It featured camera work and editing by her son Gabriel Frye-Behar.

Behar is a professor at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.[1] Her literary work is featured in the Michigan State University's Michigan Writers Series.[4] A writer of anthropology, essays, poetry and fiction, Behar focuses on issues related to women and feminism.[3]

Her personal life experiences as a Jewish Cuban-American woman are frequently an important part of her writing. Her dissertation (1983), based on her first fieldwork in northern Spain, became the basis for her first book.[5]

Her second book, Translated Woman (1993), was based on ten years of fieldwork in a rural town in Mexico. Her book, The Vulnerable Observer: Anthropology That Breaks Your Heart, examines the role that the personal can play in ethnographic writing and generated controversy. Jewish Cuba is the topic of her book, An Island Called Home: Returning to Jewish Cuba (2007), as well as her latest book, Traveling Heavy: A Memoir in between Journeys (2013).

Traveling Heavy

Traveling Heavy (2013) is a memoir about her Cuban-American family, descended from both Askenazi and Sephardic Jews in Cuba, as well as the strangers who ease her journey in life. Her probings about her complicated Jewish Cuban ancestry and family’s immigration to America explore issues about identity and belonging.[6] Kirkus Reviews described her book as "A heartfelt witness to the changing political and emotional landscape of the Cuban-American experience."[6] Behar studies the revitalization of Cuban Jewish life as an anthropologist, but her personal journey back to the island she left as a little girl is the heart of this “memoir I snuck in, between journeys.”[7]

An Island Called Home

An Island Called Home (2007) was written in Behar's quest for a better understanding of Jewish Cuba and particularly her family's roots.[8] She noted, “I knew the stories of the Jews in Cuba, but it was all about looking at them as a community”.[8] Traveling the island, Behar becomes the confidante to a host of Jewish strangers, building connections for further anthropological research. Conducting one-on-one interviews, combined with black-and-white photography, she builds readers an image of the diasporic thread connecting Cuban Jews to one another.[8]

Beginning with Jewish immigrants of the 1920s, who fled unrest in Turkey, Russia and Poland, she moves on to stories of later immigrants, Polish and German Jews who fled to Cuba in the 1930s and 1940s in order to escape persecution and the concentration camps of the Nazis. In Cuba immigrants opened mom-and-pop shops, peddled, and gradually adopted Spanish while still speaking Yiddish, settling into Latino life in La Habana Vieja. In the early part of the century, many Jewish immigrants worked in the Cuban garment industry.[2] More than 94% left during and after the 1959 revolution.[2][9] As her family was among those who left Cuba, Behar intertwines her personal thoughts and feelings with her professional, analytical observations of the current society.[8]

The Vulnerable Observer

The Vulnerable Observer recounts Behar's passage to integrating subjective aspects into her anthropological studies. Suffering her grandfather's death while on a field trip to Spain to study funeral practices, she decided the ethnographer could never be fully detached, and needed to become a “vulnerable observer”.[10] She argues that the ethnographic fieldworker should identify and work though, his or her own emotional involvement with the subject under study.[10] She strongly critiques conventional ideas of objectivity.[11] She suggested that the ideal of a "scientific," distanced, impersonal mode of presenting materials was incomplete.[11] Other anthropologists, including Claude Levi-Strauss, Georges Devereux, and Clifford Geertz, had also suggested that the researcher had to claim being part of the process more openly. Behar's six personal essays in The Vulnerable Observer are examples of her subjective approach.[10]

Behar’s grandparents emigrated to Cuba from Russia, Poland and Turkey during the 1920s. In 1962 they fled Cuba to escape Castro’s communism.[11] At the age of nine, Behar suffered a broken leg from the crash of her family's car. She was immobilized for a year.[10] The experience and recovery period led her to the recognition that “the body is a homeland” of stored memory and pain.[11]

Translated Woman

In 1985, Behar was working in Mexico when she befriended an Indian witch working as a street peddler.[12] Townspeople said the witch, Esperanza Hernandez, had used black magic to blind her ex-husband after he regularly beat her and then left her for his mistress.[12] Behar’s portrayal of Esperanza’s story in Translated Woman suggests she alienated her own mother, inspiring Behar to portray Esperanza as a feminist heroine.[12] Esperanza claims she found redemption in a spiritualist cult constructed around Pancho Villa. She blamed pent-up rage about her husband and life as the reason for the deaths in infancy of the first six of her 12 children.[12] Esperanza’s rage led her to beat up her husband’s lover, throw her son out of the house, beat a daughter for refusing to support her, and disown another son for having an affair with an uncle’s ex-mistress because she considered it to be incestuous.[12] Behar reflects on her own life and begins to think that her Latina-gringa conflicts result from a feeling of loss after having tried to model herself according to the American Dream, thus losing some sense of her Cuban Jewish family's past in that island nation.[13] Esperanza’s odyssey examines physical borders, margins and separations.[13] Translated Woman contributes to the feminist argument that studying women in anthropology has been undervalued due to traditional academic prejudices that view women-centered analysis as too personally biased.[14]

Awards and honours

Selected bibliography

Books

Film

  • Adio Kerida (Goodbye Dear Love): A Cuban-American Woman's Search for Sephardic Memories (2002)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ruth Behar Michigan Writers Collection
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Cuba", Jewish Virtual Library
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  5. "Ruth Behar", Writers of the Caribbean
  6. 6.0 6.1 : Ruth Behar, Traveling Heavy, Kirkus Reviews
  7. Review: Ruth Behar, Traveling Heavy'", Boston Globe, 7 May 2013
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  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 M. L. DeVault, "Book Review: Behar/'The Vulnerable Observer'," Contemporary Sociology, 1998
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  13. 13.0 13.1 B. Sanchez, "Book Review: 'Translated Woman'," Hispanic Magazine, 1993
  14. E. Perez, "Book Review: Behar/Translated Woman," Journal of American History, September 1994
  15. [1]

External links

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