2012
DOI: 10.1017/s0165115312000575
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Creating Confusion in the Colonies: Jews, Citizenship, and the Dutch and British Atlantics

Abstract: Jews in most of early modern Europe struggled to assert their rights within legal frameworks that presumed them to be intrinsically different—aliens—from the (Christian) population around them no matter where they had been born, how they dressed and behaved, or what language they spoke. This struggle played itself out on various fronts, not the least of which was in the Jewish assertion of the right to become more than aliens—to become citizens or subjects—of the territories in which they lived. Citizenship, i… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
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References 12 publications
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