A collaboration of the world’s leading contemporary Jewry scholars, this book explains how and why Jewish identity differs in various societies and regions and the impact of these variations on the theory and practice of Jewish education. The authors discuss differences that extend beyond such immediately obvious variations as language and dress. Included is an examination of what Jews believe they share and what sets them apart from others; what specific elements of Judaism, which conceptualizations, and which interpretations acquire special emphasis; and the extent to which, and the manner in which, Jews are to function as part of the larger societies in which they dwell.
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction
Steven M. Cohen
Part I. Jewish Responses to Modernity
1. Being Jewish and . . .
Michael A. Meyer
2. Jewish Religious, Ethnic, and National Identities: Convergences and Conflicts
Daniel J. Elazar
3. Arthur Ruppin Revisited: The Jews of Today, 19041994
Sergio Della Pergola
4. A Tradition of Invention: Family and Educational Institutions among Contemporary Traditionalizing Jews
Harvey E. Goldberg
Part II. European and North American Variations
5. National Contexts, Eastern European Immigrants, and Jewish Identity: A Comparative Analysis
Paula E. Hyman
6. British Jews or Britons of the Jewish Persuasion? The Religious Constraints of Civic Freedom
Geoffrey Alderman
7. Reluctant Cosmopolitans: The Impact of Continentalism, Multiculturalism, and Globalization on Jewish Identity in Canada
Stuart Schoenfeld
8. From Commandment to Persuasion: Probing the ‘Hard’ Secularism of American Jewry
Henry L. Feingold
9. Family Economy/Family Relations: The Development of American Jewish Ethnicity in the Early Twentieth Century
Riv-Ellen Prell
Part III. Regional Variations in the United States
10. Inventing Jewish Identity in California: Shlomo Bardin, Zionism, and the Brandeis Camp Institute
Deborah Dash Moore
11. Jewishness in New York: Exception or the Rule?
Bethamie Horowitz
Part IV. The Israeli Difference
12. From Individuality to Identity: Directions in the Thought of J. B. Soloveitchik and Eliezer Schweid
Jonathan Cohen
13. Patterns of Jewish Identity Among Israeli Youth and Implications for Teaching of Jewish Sources
Asher Shkedi
14. A Social Constructivist Approach to Jewish Identity
Gabriel Horencyzk and Zvi Bekerman
15. Jewish and Other National and Ethnic Identities of Israeli Jews
Stephen Sharot
Index
Over de auteur
At the Hebrew University,
Steven M. Cohen is Associate Professor at the Melton Center for Jewish Education and
Gabriel Horenczyk is Senior Lecturer at the Melton Center and the School of Education. Cohen is the author of several books, including
Two Worlds of Judaism: The Israeli and American Experiences (with Charles Liebman), and
Cosmopolitans and Parochials: Modern Orthodox Jews in America (with Samuel C. Heilman). Horenczyk is the coeditor of
Language, Identity, and Immigration (with Elite Olshtain).