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Strictly Kosher Reading: Popular Literature and the Condition of Contemporary Orthodoxy (Jewish Identities in Post-Modern Society)
Yoel Finkelman
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Description for Strictly Kosher Reading: Popular Literature and the Condition of Contemporary Orthodoxy (Jewish Identities in Post-Modern Society)
Hardcover. In every Haredi [ultra-Orthodox] neighbourhood, bookstores overflow with titles written by and for Haredi Jews. This title offers a reading of contemporary Haredi fiction, self-help, history, and theology, explaining how this isolationist religious community constructs its complex and paradoxical relationship with contemporary culture. Series: Jewish Identity in Post Modern Society. Num Pages: 250 pages, Illustrations. BIC Classification: DSB; HRJ; JFSR1. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational; (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly; (UU) Undergraduate. Dimension: 162 x 241 x 20. Weight in Grams: 518.
In every Haredi [ultra-Orthodox] neighbourhood today, bookstores overflow with an expansive variety of popular titles written by and for Haredi Jews. "Strictly Kosher Reading" offers a close reading of contemporary Haredi fiction, self-help, history, and popular theology, explaining how this isolationist religious community constructs its complex and paradoxical relationship with contemporary culture. Like isolationist religious groups throughout the world, Haredi Jews, as reflected in their popular literature, struggle to remain distinctive in a culture they find both frightening and attractive. Haredi popular literature sets up sharp boundaries between Haredi Jews and others. Yet, the same literature simultaneously undermines and blurs those boundaries.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2011
Publisher
Academic Studies Press
Condition
New
Series
Jewish Identities in Post Modern Society
Number of Pages
258
Place of Publication
Brighton, United States
ISBN
9781936235377
SKU
V9781936235377
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Yoel Finkelman
Yoel Finkelman (Ph.D. Hebrew University) is a lecturer in the Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Contemporary Jewry at Bar-Ilan University. He teaches Talmud and Jewish Thought at Midreshet Lindenbaum in Jerusalem, and is the Director of Projects and Research at ATID, a Jerusalem-based organization that provides resources and training for Jewish educational leadership.
Reviews for Strictly Kosher Reading: Popular Literature and the Condition of Contemporary Orthodoxy (Jewish Identities in Post-Modern Society)
"Haredi Judaism is still in its early stages of development, but has already been the focus of numerous scholars, most of whom look at the learned writings of this community. In this new book, Yoel Finkelman has opened up for us the world of popular culture and thought in the haredi world. His concern is how haredim view themselves and how they write about their community and history. At the same time that haredi society attempts to create walls between itself and the wider culture, its writngs for the masses are very much influenced by general trends, even in areas as important as marriage and parenting. Combining keen sociological insight with historical knowledge, Finkelman is a wonderful guide to the recent trends in haredi society."
Marc Shapiro "Yoel Finkelman presents a penetrating and fascinating analysis of the ways in which American “haredi” (“ultraorthodox”) writers and educators use the broader culture to create and maintain clear boundaries between themselves and the outside society and culture. With acute observations and a very effective writing style, this book is for anyone interested in the areas of American Orthodox Judaism, Jewish education, religion and media, as well as the broader social scientific area of culture and cognition."
Chaim I. Waxman, Rutgers University "In Strictly Kosher Reading, Yoel Finkelman introduces, interrogates and theorizes contemporary Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) popular literature of a variety of genres, from fiction to biography to popular theology, revealing the tensions inherent in a tradition that simultaneously rejects American culture while adapting
and sometimes adopting
its values and attitudes. As such, the book provides fascinating insights into an aspect of Haredi culture little known outside of Orthodox Jewish circles in a scholarly, yet highly accessible, way."
Mary Ann Beavis, Founding Editor, Journal of Religion and Popular Culture "The noteworthy technique of this work is its analysis of trendy haredi literature . . . since the fashionable writing of Western culture is inconsistent with the religious values of haredi Jews, a literature has emerged written by and published for this community, reflecting their values and seeking to promote their worldview. This is the central focus of Finkelman s insightful book, which examines how haredi Jews understand themselves; how and why they strive to be distinct; and ironically, how they are deeply influenced by the society from which they struggle so hard to be detached."
Moshe Sherman, Touro College, H-Net Reviews "Yoel Finkelman critically investigates a community that he simultaneously inhabits and questions. A modern Orthodox Jew himself, he discovers an often hypocritical grooming of the literature, its publishers and hierarchy within the Ultra Orthodox Haredi community. . . . Finkelman stands with only a handful of scholars such as Jeremey Stolow (author of Orthodox by Design: Judaism, Print Politics, and the Artscroll Revolution, 2010) who have taken a risk to reveal and criticize their own Jewish community. This scholarship calls for more critical analysis and post modern identity theory in Jewish Studies internationally."
Tamar H. Havilio, Hebrew Union College
American Studies Journal, Vol. 52, no. 3
Marc Shapiro "Yoel Finkelman presents a penetrating and fascinating analysis of the ways in which American “haredi” (“ultraorthodox”) writers and educators use the broader culture to create and maintain clear boundaries between themselves and the outside society and culture. With acute observations and a very effective writing style, this book is for anyone interested in the areas of American Orthodox Judaism, Jewish education, religion and media, as well as the broader social scientific area of culture and cognition."
Chaim I. Waxman, Rutgers University "In Strictly Kosher Reading, Yoel Finkelman introduces, interrogates and theorizes contemporary Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) popular literature of a variety of genres, from fiction to biography to popular theology, revealing the tensions inherent in a tradition that simultaneously rejects American culture while adapting
and sometimes adopting
its values and attitudes. As such, the book provides fascinating insights into an aspect of Haredi culture little known outside of Orthodox Jewish circles in a scholarly, yet highly accessible, way."
Mary Ann Beavis, Founding Editor, Journal of Religion and Popular Culture "The noteworthy technique of this work is its analysis of trendy haredi literature . . . since the fashionable writing of Western culture is inconsistent with the religious values of haredi Jews, a literature has emerged written by and published for this community, reflecting their values and seeking to promote their worldview. This is the central focus of Finkelman s insightful book, which examines how haredi Jews understand themselves; how and why they strive to be distinct; and ironically, how they are deeply influenced by the society from which they struggle so hard to be detached."
Moshe Sherman, Touro College, H-Net Reviews "Yoel Finkelman critically investigates a community that he simultaneously inhabits and questions. A modern Orthodox Jew himself, he discovers an often hypocritical grooming of the literature, its publishers and hierarchy within the Ultra Orthodox Haredi community. . . . Finkelman stands with only a handful of scholars such as Jeremey Stolow (author of Orthodox by Design: Judaism, Print Politics, and the Artscroll Revolution, 2010) who have taken a risk to reveal and criticize their own Jewish community. This scholarship calls for more critical analysis and post modern identity theory in Jewish Studies internationally."
Tamar H. Havilio, Hebrew Union College
American Studies Journal, Vol. 52, no. 3