Beyond Jewish Identity
Rethinking Concepts and Imagining Alternatives
Jon A Levisohn editor Ari Y Kelman editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Academic Studies Press
Published:30th Sep '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume, while not the first to explore and critique the concept of Jewish identity, makes two important interventions into contemporary understandings of American Jewish life. It is the first collection to critically examine the relationship between Jewish education and Jewish identity. Insofar as Jewish identity has become the most popular way to talk about the desired outcome of Jewish education, a critical assessment of the relationship between education and identity is both useful and necessary. It is useful because the reification of identity has, we believe, hampered much educational creativity in the rather single-minded pursuit of this goal. It is necessary because the nearly ubiquitous employment of the term obscures a whole set of significant questions about what Jewish education is and ought to be for in the first place.
Second, this volume offers responses that are not merely synonymous replacements for "identity." With a selection of more critical essays, we hope that we can begin to expand, rather than replace, the array of ideas that the term "identity" is so often used to represent.
As scholars of Jewish education, the authors of this book hope their work contributes to any number of new conversations about the relationship between Jewish education and Jewish life. The intention here is to move from critical inquiry (in Part I of the volume) to suggestive possibilities (Part II). The true measure of this effort, of course, lies in the hands of the readers, those who will advance our understanding of the complexities of American Jewish education and life—beyond Jewish identity.
“Levisohn and Kelman’s instructive collection of essays on Jewish identity and education… is situated in a solid understanding of the problems with the concept of identity and the difficulties this raises for Jewish educators who have made the construction or ‘strengthening’ of Jewish identity the goal of their efforts.”
— Stephen Frosh, University of London, Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 21:4
“It’s a good thing for the Jewish educational domain to question the ways that funders and other stakeholders understand the work of educators, schools, and other educational institutions. The book succeeds in pushing back against the heavy hand of funders’ expectations about how individual educational enterprises are supposed to yield subsequent Jewish identities. … The editors of this volume are to be commended for gathering together this stimulating collection of essays to focus our attention on the relationship between Jewish identity and Jewish education. I hope this book leads to many more focused studies that will illuminate and extend the important questions it provokes.”
— Bethamie Horowitz, New York University, Journal of Jewish Education
“If you have any connection to the world of Jewish education, you’ve heard the phrase ‘Jewish Identity’ thrown about. However, it is rarely and inconsistently defined. Is it a tool towards a specific outcome or a goal unto itself? What assumptions are Jewish educators making and what are their blind spots? This excellent collection of studies tackles these questions and presents several ways of reframing priorities for Jewish education. Some overlap in the content occurs in some chapters, but not overly so. Highly recommended.“
— Daniel Scheide, Florida Atlantic University, AJL Reviews
“‘Jewish identity’ is such a complex idea—neither simply a religious, nor cultural, nor ethnic ‘identity,’ but all of those things combined (and more). This important volume rejects narrow definitions and resists the way that ‘identity’ has been oversimplified and flattened in Jewish communal contexts. Along the way, it offers new paths for other communities struggling with concepts of identity to follow as well.”
— Felicia Herman, Executive Director, Natan Fund
“At once both a useful exploration of how the term ‘Jewish identity’ came to dominate the discourse of American Jewish elites and a probing analysis of the term’s appropriation to define the goals of Jewish education, Beyond Jewish Identity offers a no-holds-barred critique of the politics surrounding the term. Collectively, the accomplished scholars assembled in this volume make the case for shifting the focus from how Jews feel to how they act as Jews.”
— Jack Wertheimer, Professor of American Jewish History, Jewish Theological Seminary
“What are we talking about when we talk about Jewish identity? The Jewish community sorely needs a dose of clarity and discernment about this vital question. This volume not only unmasks the many problems with how we use that phrase, but also reveals the fruitful concepts buried within it, paving our way forward to a new understanding of exactly what elements of flourishing Jewish life our community’s organizations and leaders can build and sustain.”
— Andrés Spokoiny, President & CEO, Jewish Funders Network
“Beyond Jewish Identity interrogates the long-standing premise that the goal of Jewish education is to strengthen a monolithic ‘Jewish identity,’ challenging us to create more specific and more aspirational goals and pushing us to broaden our understanding of ‘Jewish identity’ beyond the traditional measures of ‘greater religious observance’ or ‘Jewish affiliation.’ Most Jews carry a multiplicity of identities. This book articulates a set of frameworks for pursuing this important, timely conversation.”
— Angela Buchdal, Senior Rabbi, Central Synagogue
ISBN: 9781644691298
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
290 pages