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Judging Jewish Identity in the United States (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,389
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Judging Jewish Identity in the United States (Hardcover)
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This book focuses on the first case to provide Jewish Americans
with race-based civil rights to highlight the complexity of
White-perceived Jewish racialization in the United States. In 1982,
vandals defaced Shaare Tefila Congregation with Ku Klux Klan and
neo-Nazi images and slogans. In the subsequent court case, the
congregation's lawyers were required to invoke "race"-based
statutes since no "religion"-based laws applied to the desecration.
Annalise Glauz-Todrank offers a nuanced analysis of the ways in
which the members of the congregation themselves, their lawyers,
and the vandals' lawyers used the concepts of race and religion to
argue their case. Judging Jewish Identity in the United States
understands "race" and "religion" as White, Christian categories
and illustrates how they have been accepted and internalized in the
American environment. Focusing on the 1987 case Shaare Tefila
Congregation v. Cobb, Glauz-Todrank examines how the judges, in
each of the three courts, viewed the White-perceived Jewish
congregants as well as how the congregants responded to the
vandalism, felt relief by the cleanup day that incorporated their
neighbors, and pursued the case in the context of their embodied
Jewish American experiences.
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