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From brutal Nazi killers to Hanukkah heroes in the 'hood, tough
Jews refute images of doomed Holocaust victims, wandering Jews of
exile before them, and the post-war 'nice Jewish boys' who
followed. They foster belligerent responses to polemics of fear and
self-hatred, and as such, materialize as a challenge for postmodern
cultural identity. A Culture of Tough Jews reframes the tough Jew
as an enduring act of rhetorical regeneration by reifying a related
figure, the vital Jew. As corrective to the tough Jew, the vital
Jew encourages robust cultural production and dialogue. For
audiences of rhetoric and cultural studies, the book offers
critical and theoretical study of rhetorical regeneration,
including original constructs of postmodern blackface and
transformative performativity, as a resource for contemporary
rhetorical invention. It also constitutes a case study for the
postmodern critique of identity by invoking concerns of
(post)assimilation, gender and power, and the social construction
of race, ethnicity, class, and power to advance conversations on
fractious cultural exigencies. A Culture of Tough Jews is a
spirited call for postmodern cultural vitality that responds to
contemporary politics of identity and memory.
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