Jew - Cynthia M. Baker

Jew

Buch | Softcover
208 Seiten
2017
Rutgers University Press (Verlag)
978-0-8135-6302-2 (ISBN)
41,90 inkl. MwSt
For millennia, Jew has signified the consummate Other, a persistent fly in the ointment of Western civilization's grand narratives and cultural projects. Only very recently, however, has Jew been reclaimed as a term of self-identification and pride. With these insights as a point of departure, this book offers a wide-ranging exploration of this key word.
Jew.  The word possesses an uncanny power to provoke and unsettle. For millennia, Jew has signified the consummate Other, a persistent fly in the ointment of Western civilization’s grand narratives and cultural projects. Only very recently, however, has Jew been reclaimed as a term of self-identification and pride.   With these insights as a point of departure, this book offers a wide-ranging exploration of the key word Jew—a term that lies not only at the heart of Jewish experience, but indeed at the core of Western civilization. Examining scholarly debates about the origins and early meanings of Jew, Cynthia M. Baker interrogates categories like “ethnicity,” “race,” and “religion” that inevitably feature in attempts to define the word. Tracing the term’s evolution, she also illuminates its many contradictions, revealing how Jew has served as a marker of materialism and intellectualism, socialism and capitalism, worldly cosmopolitanism and clannish parochialism, chosen status, and accursed stigma. Baker proceeds to explore the complex challenges that attend the modern appropriation of Jew as a term of self-identification, with forays into Yiddish language and culture, as well as meditations on Jew-as-identity by contemporary public intellectuals. Finally, by tracing the phrase new Jews through a range of contexts—including the early Zionist movement, current debates about Muslim immigration to Europe, and recent sociological studies in the United States—the book provides a glimpse of what the word Jew is coming to mean in an era of Internet cultures, genetic sequencing, precarious nationalisms, and proliferating identities. 

CYNTHIA M. BAKER is a professor and the chair of religious studies at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. She is the author of Rebuilding the House of Israel: Architectures of Gender in Jewish Antiquity. 

Foreword by the Series Editors
 Acknowledgments
 A Note on Orthography

 Introduction
 Owning the Word
 Jews, Jew, the Jews, the Jew, Jewish, Jewess
 Outline of This Book

 1 Terms of Debate
 First Jews
 A Jew Outward or a Jew Inward?
 Jews, Women, Slaves
 From Ethnos to Ethnicity/Race and Religion

 2 State of the (Jew[ish]) Question
 Vos Macht a Yid?
 Jew in Jewish Studies
 Thinking (with) Jew(s)

 3 In a New Key: New Jews
 Zionism’s New Jew and the Birth of the Genomic Jew
 New Jews in a New Europe
 New Jews: A View from the New World

 NotesIndex 

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Key Words in Jewish Studies
Verlagsort New Brunswick NJ
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 286 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Religion / Theologie Judentum
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie Völkerkunde (Naturvölker)
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Spezielle Soziologien
ISBN-10 0-8135-6302-X / 081356302X
ISBN-13 978-0-8135-6302-2 / 9780813563022
Zustand Neuware
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