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‘Yellow Bar Mitzvah’: Mobilisations of Gangsta Rap as Futures Oriented, Agential Jewish Heritage in Germany

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State-approved and -funded Jewish cultural heritage has largely focused on concrete tangible spaces or structures, such as synagogues and mikvaot (ritual baths), and material objects. They often represent and evoke an idealised, unchanging Jewishness of the past that is presumed to be acceptable to non-Jewish audiences, yet one that bears little resemblance to lived Judaism, whether past or present. Using hip-hop by Jewish subjects in Germany as a case study, with a special focus on rapper Dimitri Chpakov, this article investigates the mobilisation of popular culture in the twenty-first century by diverse Jewish subjects under the radar of state-sanctioned conceptualisations and representations. Past studies have examined Jewish hip-hop in Germany within the authorised heritage discourse around Holocaust commemoration and anti-Semitism. This article argues that Jewish hip-hop initiatives need to be explored as alternative statements of Jewish heritage, Jewish communal identity, and Jewish diversity, geared towards young living Jewish community members. Such functions tend to be ignored or misunderstood in top-down discourses perpetuated in the public sphere. This article examines the extent to which present-day German Jewish hip-hop prompts a counter-heritagisation process: by creating compelling, deeply personal, and imitable musical forms, it reimagines and reforms conventional definitions of heritage in the service of young Jews living in Germany.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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27(1)

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43-66

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Crowdus, Miranda ‘Yellow Bar Mitzvah’: Mobilisations of Gangsta Rap as Futures Oriented, Agential Jewish Heritage in Germany. Ethnoscripts. 2025: 43-66.  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.15460/ethnoscripts.2025.27.1.2408