Y. Michal Bodemann

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Y. Michal Bodemann
Born Yark Michal Bodemann
9 March 1944
Residence Germany, Canada
Nationality German/Canadian
Era 21st-century philosophy
Region European and Western sociology
School Max Weber, Georg Simmel, Karl Marx, Chicago School of Sociology
Main interests
German Jewry, Jewish Diaspora, memory,
Influences

Y. Michal Bodemann is Professor Emeritus, sociologist, best known for his work on German Jewry, the concept of ideological labor (1991) and his contributions to sociological praxis, interventive field work, in particular his interventive observation method [1] in qualitative fieldwork. In the approach to interventive observation, Bodemann emphasizes the reciprocal nature of intervention or active participation, against the allegedly passive or neutral note taking of the observer. Bodemann's theoretical foundation continues to be influential against the positivist notions of objectivity, which still persist in the field of sociology and in the approach to qualitative methods. His methodological approach relates to the work of Michael Burawoy and notions of public sociology. Bodemann is well known for his contributions to Jewish studies and studies of praxis. He is the author and editor of an exemplary number of books, newspaper and academic articles spanning the entirety of his academic career.

Early Life and Education: 1944–1966

Y. Michal Bodemann was born on March 9, 1944. His early childhood he spent in the Bavarian Alps where his father, an artist, had withdrawn as part of a community of writers and artists. Bodemann completed gymnasium in Korntal near Stuttgart. He began his studies at the universities of Munich, Heidelberg and Mannheim. In 1966 he moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts where he continued his studies in sociology and literature at Brandeis University. Bodemann completed his PhD. at Brandeis University in 1979.

PhD Thesis: Telemula (1800–1980)

Bodemann’s PhD Thesis entitled Telemula: Aspects of the micro-organization of backwardness in central Sardinia included qualitative fieldwork and methods, ethnographic participant observation, and qualitative interview based research. The thesis explored the development of backwardness in a small village in Sardinia from 1800 until 1980. It examined how the community became geographically marginalized and how the communal subsistence economy was disrupted and destroyed on account of new forms of taxation and privatization of land as well as the ecological destruction of its natural environment, especially deforestation. Furthermore, the dissertation focused on the development of new elite families in the community and the transformation of its kinship structures over the one hundred years.

Academic career

University of Toronto: 1974–2012

In 1974, Bodemann accepted a teaching position at the University of Toronto where he taught until 2012. In 1977 Bodemann became assistant professor at the University of Toronto, quickly becoming appointed to the graduate faculty in 1979 and soon after, associate professor with tenure in 1980. He was appointed to Full Professor in 1993. His teaching includes qualitative sociological methods, focusing on critically examining the qualitative methods in field work, as well as the praxis of sociological inquiry.

Teaching

At the graduate level he has taught ‘Historical and Ethnographic Methods’, ‘Qualitative Methods’, and, among others, ‘Political Sociology of Germany in Contemporary Europe’. At the undergraduate level he has taught countless seminars in both North America and Europe, including, ‘Field Methods’, ‘The Jewish Community in Europe and North America’, ‘Ethnicity in Social Organization’, ‘Comparative Ethnic Relations’, and among others ‘Sociological Theory’. Some courses in German, and in Europe, have included, ‘Zu politischen Soziologie Gramscis’, ‘Marxismus und Juden "frage"’, and ‘"Rasse" und Ethnizität in westlichen Gesellschaften’, which covered issues of race, ethnicity, issues/topics related to the German Jewry, and political/sociological theories.

Academic Appointments

Throughout his now well-established career, Bodemann positioned himself in both the North American and European sociological scene. Along with his academic appointments at the University of Toronto he held visiting appointments at the University of Haifa and Hebrew University, Tel Aviv, and Free University (Freie Universität), and Humboldt (Humboldt-Universität), Berlin. From 2008 was the director of the European Office of the University of Toronto in Berlin and continues to be affiliated with Joint Initiative in German and European Studies (JIGES) and the Ethnic and Pluralism Studies Program at the University of Toronto where he was joint appointed to the Munk School of Global Affairs.

Professional Affiliations

Bodemann was associate editor of the “Canadian Journal of Sociology” (1985–1987),[2] the associate editor of the “Canadian Jewish Outlook” (1979–1982)[3] and the editor of “Sardinia Newsletter” (1980–1983). Among the other professional affiliations and activities, from 1980 onwards, Bodemann belonged to the “Insurgent Sociologist” /“Critical Sociology Toronto Collective”. Through the decades his active membership and critical, often anti-positivist and methodologically radical insights influenced many of his young contemporaries.

Thought

German Jewry

In the early eighties, Bodemann began his research on the rise of the Jewish Community in Germany after World War II. His work, on the German Jewry is dominated by the question:How was it possible that after the Holocaust, and the total destruction of the German-Jewish community, a new Jewish community could develop in Germany?
Bodemann has argued that this was only possible because Western Germany at the time actively supported the new establishment of a Jewish community in order to signal to its Western neighbors, during the Cold War its break with the Nazi past. This real-political maneuver notwithstanding, the new generations felt genuine regret and attempted to recuperate the German Jewish intellectual and cultural heritage. Bodemann also claims, that linking up to the past could only be accomplished by means of the construction of memory. In this regard, Bodemann has written extensively on the construction of memory of Kristallnacht and its permutations over the decades after the Shoah. In particular, he has argued that the date of 9 November 1938 is incorrect: the pogroms were more profuse and started in full force on 10 November, mostly not at night but during the light of day.
His book, Gedächtnistheater. Die jüdische Gemeinschaft und ihre deutsche Erfindung (Theatre of Memory. The Jewish Community and its German Invention, 1996) was listed as one of the top ten non-fiction books by the German book critics that year. His book, A Jewish Family in Germany Today, a monograph on an extended Jewish family living in Germany today appeared 2005 with Duke University Press.

Ideological Labor

The concept of ideological labor has its seeds in Everett Hughes idea of a moral division of labor, which is a “process by which differing moral functions are distributed among members of society, as individuals and categories of individuals” (Hughes, 1971: 289). For Bodemann ideological labor outlines the ways in which ethnic groups perform a specific ideological function within society. In his research, he outlines, how the German Jewry functioned in postwar West Germany to re-capture Jewish identity and culture in Germany following the Holocaust.
Bodemann accounts for three phases in the relationship between the German Jewry, ethnicity and the state post World War II, which show how ideological labor functioned and continues to function into the present:
1. Mediation: The first phase (post WWII – 1952) Bodemann calls “the phase of charismatic mediators” (Bodemann, 1990: 39). In this first phase, diverse groups from diverse backgrounds come together in She'erit Hapletah (“saved remnant”).
2. Reconsolidation: The second phase is when the process of bureaucratic reconsolidation occurs, and there is an active reconstruction of Jewish life.
3. Representationism: The third phase is the phase that continues in the present, with the continued representation of Jewish life, culture and religion in public life, or what Bodemann calls representationism.

Works & Publications

Bodemann is the author of numerous articles and editor of many books, for example:

Selected Books

  • Bodemann, Y. M. (1996), Gedächtnistheater. Die jüdische Gemeinschaft und ihre deutsche Erfindung (Theatre of Memory. The Jewish Community and its German Invention). Hamburg, Rotbuch Verlag.
  • Bodemann, Y. M. (1996), Jews, Germans, Memory: Reconstructions of Jewish Life in Germany. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press.
  • Bodemann, Y. M. (2002), In den Wogen der Erinnerung. Jüdisches Leben in Deutschland. (In the tides of memory, Jewish life in Germany). München, DTV.
  • Bodemann, Y. M. (2005), A Jewish Family in Germany Today: An Intimate Portrait. Durham, NC, Duke University Press.
  • Bodemann, Y. M., ed., (2007), Citizenship and Immigrant Incorporation. Comparative Perspectives on North America and Western Europe. London – New York, Palgrave Macmillan, with Gökçe Yurdakul, eds., with an introduction by Michal Bodemann.
  • Bodemann, Y. M., ed., (2008), The New German Jewry and the European Context. Palgrave Macmillan.

Selected Articles

References

External links