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After Tragedy and Triumph
Essays in Modern Jewish Thought and the American Experience

Michael Berenbaum explores the Jewish identity of his generation, the first to mature after tragedy and triumph.

Michael Berenbaum (Author)

9780521099929, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 18 January 2009

224 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm, 0.34 kg

Review of the hardback: 'These essays offer us an important new Jewish voice. Michael Berenbaum combines a creative mind with the insights gleaned from firsthand experience. He gives an original portrait of how understanding of the Holocaust has become central in American Jewish life and how that understanding itself has been defined by the American experience. His theological commentary ranges from a fresh appreciation of Martin Buber and critique of Franz Rosenzweig to Orthodoxy's problems and possibilities with pluralism. Everything he touches he clarifies and illuminates. By sharing his insights our understanding is transformed. The reader is enriched - this is valuable reading.' Rabbi Irving Greenberg

The story of American Jewry is inextricably entwined with the awesome defeat of the Holocaust and the rebirth of the state of Israel. However, for Michael Berenbaum, and others of his generation, whose adult consciousness included the war in Lebanon and the Palestinian Uprisings, the tale is more anguished, for the Jewish people is now divided, uncertain about the implications of the past and the direction of its future. Berenbaum explores the Jewish identity of this generation, the first to mature after tragedy and triumph. He probes the Holocaust's impact on Jewish consciousness and the imprint of American culture on Jewish identity. While demonstrating that the security of victory is one step from the anguish of victims, even when the victors have recently emerged from the fire, Berenbaum holds out the hope of liberation for Judaism, maintaining that five thousand years of history, with its chapter of Holocaust and empowerment, provide a unique foundation upon which to build a future.

Foreword Richard L. Rubenstein
Introduction
Part I. The Holocaust in Contemporary American Culture: 1. The nativisation of the Holocaust
2. The uniqueness and universality of the Holocaust
3. Public commemoration of the Holocaust
4. Is the centrality of the Holocaust overemphasised? Two dialogues
5. Issues in teaching the Holocaust
6. What we should teach our children
7. The shadows of the Holocaust
Part II. Jewish Thought and Modern History: 8. Franz Rosenzweig and Martin Buber Reconsidered
9. The problem of pluralism in contemporary orthodoxy: philosophy and politics
10. From Auschwitz to Oslo: the journey of Elie Wiesel
11. Jacob Neusner and the renewal of an ever-dying people
12. Political Zionism's would-be successors: sectarianism, Messianism, nationalism, and secularism
13. The situation of the American Jew
Notes
Index.

Subject Areas: Judaism [HRJ]

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