The incongruence if not antagonism between modern liberalism and
the Jewish sense of the world has been most notably articulated by
Lionel Trilling. Certainly the imaginative limitations and
intellectual smugness he discerned in his own ideological party
found a parallel, in his view, in the embrace of liberalism by the
American Jewish community. The consequences of that embrace entail
both a superficial intellectual and religious culture and a
misunderstanding of the social and political dimensions of Judaism.
In Classical Liberalism and the Jewish Tradition, Edward Alexander
engages in a wide-ranging exploration of the roots of the
fundamental antagonism between liberalism and Jewish tradition from
the nineteenth century to the present day.
Central to Alexander's arguments is his incisive critique of the
distortion of modern Judaism as a child of the Enlightenment and
the notion that specifically Jewish concerns, whether with Zionism,
the Holocaust, or sacred and secular writings, constitute a narrow
and parochial betrayal of liberal interests. The chapters are
divided among political, religious, and literary subjects. The
opening chapter on Mill's ambivalent attitude toward the Jews
establishes terms of conflict between Judaism and liberal
secularism and universality as do chapters on the antisemitism of
Thomas Arnold and Marx and the more ambiguous Jewish
self-identification of Disraeli.
Alexander examines such disparate topics as the hostility to the
idea of a Jewish state on the part of numerous Israeli
intellectuals, the disdain among liberals toward the specifically
Jewish dimension of the Holocaust, and the capitulation of the
Modern Language Association to the anti-Zionism of Edward Said.
Turning to the uneasy status of Jewish religious texts and secular
literature as sources of cultural revitalization, Alexander deals
with the attempt by the Israeli scholar Adin Steinsaltz to bring
the Talmud to the attention of contemporary Jewish readers and
includes a chapter on his nineteenth-century precursor Emanuel
Deutsch and his relationship to George Eliot. An analysis of Ruth
Wisse's efforts to establish a modern Jewish literary canon is
rounded out by chapters on two of the major figures of that canon:
Isaac Bashevis Singer and Philip Roth.
While diverse in subject matter, Classical Liberalism and the
Jewish Tradition is consistent in its unapologetic advocacy of a
Jewish point of view and in its depth of scholarship in tracing the
historical roots of contemporary attitudes and ideologies.
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