Beyond Jewish identity : rethinking concepts and imagining alternatives /

Beyond Jewish identity : rethinking concepts and imagining alternatives / edited by Jon A. Levisohn and Ari Y. Kelman. - 1 electronic resource (xx, 269 pages)

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Introduction / Taking Jewish Identity Metaphors Literally / You are Jewish if You Want to Be: The Limits of Identity in a World of Multiple Practices / On the Origins and Persistence of the Jewish Identity Industry in Jewish Education / Identity and Crisis: The Origins of Identity as an Educational Outcome / Regarding the "Real" Jew: Authenticity Anxieties Around Poland's "Generation Unexpected" / Re-Thinking American Jewish Zionist Identity: A Case for Post-Zionism in the Diaspora (Based on the Writings of R. Menachem Froman) / Jewish Educators Don't Make Jews: A Sociological Reality Check About Jewish Identity Work / Beyond Language Proficiency: Fostering Metalinguistic Communities in Jewish Educational Settings / Where is the Next Soviet Jewry Movement? How Identity Education Forgot the Lessons that Jewish Activism Taught / Jewish Education as Initiation into the Practices of Jewishness / Jewish Sensibilities: Toward a New Language for Jewish Educational Goal-Setting / Index Levisohn, Jon A. / Kelman, Ari Y. -- Gottlieb, Eli -- Mehta, Samira K. -- Krasner, Jonathan -- Kelman, Ari Y. -- Reszke, Katka -- Magid, Shaul -- Zelkowicz, Tali -- Benor, Sarah Bunin / Avineri, Netta -- Kelner, Shaul -- Levisohn, Jon A. -- Moore, Lee / Woocher, Jonathan --

"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"--

9781644691304 1644691302

22573/ctv1zfz81h JSTOR

2020716545


Jews--Identity.
RELIGION--Education.
RELIGION / Education
Jews--Identity.


Electronic books.
Electronic books.

DS143

305.8924