Jewish Peoplehood: An American Innovation: Key Words in Jewish Studies, cartea 6
Autor Noam Piankoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 iul 2015
Winner of the 2017 Saul Viener Book Prize from the American Jewish Historical Society
Although fewer American Jews today describe themselves as religious, they overwhelmingly report a strong sense of belonging to the Jewish people. Indeed, Jewish peoplehood has eclipsed religion—as well as ethnicity and nationality—as the essence of what binds Jews around the globe to one another. In Jewish Peoplehood, Noam Pianko highlights the current significance and future relevance of “peoplehood” by tracing the rise, transformation, and return of this novel term.
Although fewer American Jews today describe themselves as religious, they overwhelmingly report a strong sense of belonging to the Jewish people. Indeed, Jewish peoplehood has eclipsed religion—as well as ethnicity and nationality—as the essence of what binds Jews around the globe to one another. In Jewish Peoplehood, Noam Pianko highlights the current significance and future relevance of “peoplehood” by tracing the rise, transformation, and return of this novel term.
The book tells the surprising story of peoplehood. Though it evokes a sense of timelessness, the term actually emerged in the United States in the 1930s, where it was introduced by American Jewish leaders, most notably Rabbi Stephen Wise and Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, with close ties to the Zionist movement. It engendered a sense of unity that transcended religious differences, cultural practices, geographic distance, economic disparity, and political divides, fostering solidarity with other Jews facing common existential threats, including the Holocaust, and establishing a closer connection to the Jewish homeland. But today, Pianko points out, as globalization erodes the dominance of nationalism in shaping collective identity, Jewish peoplehood risks becoming an outdated paradigm. He explains why popular models of peoplehood fail to address emerging conceptions of ethnicity, nationalism, and race, and he concludes with a much-needed roadmap for a radical reconfiguration of Jewish collectivity in an increasingly global era.
Innovative and provocative, Jewish Peoplehood provides fascinating insight into a term that assumes an increasingly important position at the heart of American Jewish and Israeli life.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780813563640
ISBN-10: 081356364X
Pagini: 186
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press
Seria Key Words in Jewish Studies
ISBN-10: 081356364X
Pagini: 186
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press
Seria Key Words in Jewish Studies
Notă biografică
NOAM PIANKO is the Samuel N. Stroum Professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Washington and directs the Stroum Jewish Studies Center there. He is the author of Zionism and the Roads Not Taken: Rawidowicz, Kaplan, Kohn.
Cuprins
Foreword, by Deborah Dash Moore, MacDonald Moore, and Andrew Bush
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Deceptively Simple Key Word
1 Terms of Debate: Jewish Nationhood and American Peoplehood
What Is a Nation?: Peoplehood’s European Precursors
What Is a Nation?: Peoplehood’s European Precursors
The Emergence of Peoplehood
1948, Israel, and a Crisis of Terminology
From Critique to Code Word
Into the American Mainstream
2 State of the Question: Enduring Entity or Constructed Community
Unity, Solidarity, Statehood
Nationalism, Globalization, and the Limits of Peoplehood
Race, Ethnicity, and Peoplehood Studies
Jewish Studies and Jewish Peoplehood
3 In a New Key: Can Peoplehood Speak to a Global Era?
Jewish: From Periphery to Center, From Describing to Defining
Neighborhood: From National to Local, From Core to Cohort
Project: From Being to Doing, From Essence to Action
Jewishhood Project(s)
Notes
Index
Recenzii
"Erudite and engaging, this book should ruffle some Jewish communal feathers ... Recommended. All levels/libraries."
"Challenges readers with a provocative and startling ideas .. The book helps establish the importance of thinking about America in the context of modern (and post-modern) Jewish history. It provides a significant way of showing how the history of the Jews in the United States has had implications for Jews far beyond those who lived there."
"This work significantly advances the understanding and assessment of a central figure of American Judaism."
Descriere
Jewish peoplehood has eclipsed religion—as well as ethnicity and nationality—as the prevailing definition of what it means to be a Jew. In Jewish Peoplehood, Noam Pianko examines the history, the current significance, and the future relevance of a term that assumes an increasingly important position in American Jewish and Israeli life.