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Jacqueline Kahanoff : ウィキペディア英語版 | Jacqueline Kahanoff
Jacqueline Shohet Kahanoff (ז'קלין כהנוב (1917-1979] was an Egyptian-Jewish novelist, essayist and journalist. Kahanaff wrote in English, although she is best known for a cycle of essays, “A Generation of Levantines,” that was published in Israel in Hebrew translation in 1959. These pieces lay out her notion of “Levantinism,” a social model of coexistence drawn from her childhood experiences in Egyptian cosmopolitan society in the interwar period. == Biography == Jacqueline Shohet was born in May 1917 in Cairo. Jacqueline's maternal grandparents emigrated from Tunisia to Egypt, where the family established the department store Chemla Frères. Jacqueline’s mother, Yvonne Chemla, was born in Egypt. Jacqueline's father, Joseph Shohet, emigrated from Iraq when he was a child. Jacqueline left Egypt for the United States in 1940 with her first husband, Izzy Margoliash. After the marriage ended, she moved to New York where she earned a degree in journalism from Columbia University. In 1952 she married Alexander Kahanoff in Paris. Two years later they moved to Israel, first settling in Beersheba, and then relocating to the Tel Aviv suburbs. Jacqueline Kahanoff died in October 1979.
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