Is Jewish identity flourishing or in decline? Community leaders
and scholarly researchers continually seek to determine the
attitudes, beliefs, and activities that best measure Jewish
identity. At issue, according to these studies, is the very
survival of the Jewish community itself. But such studies rarely
ask what actually is being examined when we attempt to assess
"Jewish identity" or any identity. Most tend to assume that
identity is a preexisting, relatively fixed frame of reference
reflecting shared cultural and historical experiences.
Drawing on recent work in such fields as cultural studies,
poststructuralist theory, postmodern philosophy, and feminist
theory, Mapping Jewish Identities challenges this premise.
Contesting conventional approaches to Jewish identity, contributors
argue that Jewish identity should be conceptualized as an ongoing
dynamic process of "becoming" in response to changing cultural and
social conditions rather than as a stable defining body of
traits.
Contributors, including Daniel Boyarin, Laura Levitt, Adi Ophir,
and Gordon Bearn, examine such topics as American Jews' desires to
connect with a lost immigrant past through photography, the
complicated function of the Holocaust in the identity formation of
contemporary Jews, the impact of the struggle with the Palestinians
on Israeli group identity construction, and the ways in which
repressed voices such as those of women, Mizrahim, and Israeli
Arabs have changed our ways of thinking about Jewish and Israeli
identity.
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