Roden writes clearly, explaining the literature and offering erudite commentary that will prompt readers to delve into the primary sources. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All academic levels/libraries.

Choice

Judaism and Jewish life reflect a diversity of identity after the past two centuries of modernization. This work examines how the early reformers of the 19th century and their legacy into the 20th century created a livable, liberal Jewish identity that allowed a reinvention of what it meant to be Jewish—a process that continues today.

Many scholars of the modern Jewish identity focus on the ways in which the past two centuries have resulted in the loss of Jewishness: through "assimilation," intermarriage, conversion to other faiths, genocide (in the Holocaust), and decline in religious observance. In this work, author Frederick S. Roden presents a decidedly different perspective: that the changes in Judaism throughout the 19th and 20th centuries resulted in a malleable, welcoming, and expanded Jewish identity—one that has benefited from intermarriage and converts to Judaism.

The book examines key issues in the modern definition of Jewish identity: who is and is not considered a Jew, and why; issues of Jewish "authenticity"; and the recent history of the debate. Attention is paid to the experiences of individuals who came to Judaism from outside the tradition: through marrying into Jewish families and/or choosing Judaism as a religion. In his consideration of the tragedy of the Holocaust, the author examines how a totalitarian regime's racial policing of Jewish identity served to awaken a connection with and reconfiguration of what that Jewish identity meant for those who retrospectively realized their Jewishness in the postwar era.

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Acknowledgments
Introduction: Authentically Jewish? Of Marranos, Mischlinge, and Gerim

Part One: The Making of Modern Jewish Identity: "Race" versus "Religion" and the Mission of Judaism
1. Jews and Modernity: German and American Contexts
2. The Development of a Reform Theology and Practice
3. The Mission of Judaism: Proselytism and Conversion at the Turn of the Century

Part Two: Modernity Redefined: Nazism's Ethnic and Cultural Legacies
4. Mischlingkeit: Nazi Racial Law and the Invention of Mixed Identity
5. Contested Identities and Christian Representations
6. Reluctant Awakenings: Imperatives to Jewishness

Part Three: Post-Holocaust Jewish Identities
7. Being and Believing in the Aftermath of the Shoah
8. The New Proselytes and "Jews by Choice": From Mission of Israel to Missionary Judaism
9. Turns and Returns to Judaism: Modern and Postmodern Possibilities
Epilogue: Revisiting "The Jew" and "The Other"

Notes
Bibliography
Index

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"Frederick S. Roden’s Recovering Jewishness: Modern Identities Reclaimed examines the complex ways in which modern Jewishness has been experienced, rethought, and reconfigured, from the elaboration of Reform Judaism in the nineteenth century to the coercive invention of Jewish and 'mixed' racial identities by the Nazis to post-Holocaust embraces of Jewishness, both traditional and experimental. Roden’s account is original especially in its emphasis not on a modern loss or fading of Jewish identity but on the expansion of possibilities for Jewishness that modernity brings, even if those possibilities also often entail losses and violence. Examining an impressively broad body of texts—historical writing, autobiography and memoir, theology, and fiction—Roden makes an extremely valuable, always thoughtful and thought-provoking, contribution to the exploration of that perpetual and thorny question: 'What is a Jew?'"
Les mer
Judaism and Jewish life reflect a diversity of identity after the past two centuries of modernization. This work examines how the early reformers of the 19th century and their legacy into the 20th century created a livable, liberal Jewish identity that allowed a reinvention of what it meant to be Jewish—a process that continues today.
Les mer
Documents how modern Judaism and the modern Jewish identity was built on diversity resulting from intermarriage and converts to Judaism over the course of two centuries

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781440837746
Publisert
2016-02-22
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
288

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Frederick S. Roden, PhD, is associate professor of English at the University of Connecticut.