A Contested Identity
Details
Isaac M. Wise was the founder of American Reform Judaism, a liberalising, modernising movement that sought to bring Judaism in line with the American ideals of universal freedom and progressive democracy. A builder rather than a theologian, he united the many disparate congregations that had been transplanted to America from Central Europe in the mid nineteenth century. By 1881 not more than a dozen congregations out of 200 were unaffiliated with Reform and Wise, as he entered old age, felt content at a job well done. But it was now that Reform faced its biggest challenges to date. Widespread apathy from within Reform saw the movement stagnate, but for Wise there was a much more visible threat: political Zionism. But why did Wise attack Zionism so vociferously when it had fewer than 15,000 active American supporters on the eve of his death? Why did it preoccupy his writings when the wider community both Jew and Gentile hardly noticed the Zionist movement in his lifetime? At the heart of this was a conflict over what it meant to be a Jew post-emancipation, a conflict which is still very much raging.
Autorentext
Sam Aldred was born in the West Midlands where he remained more or less undisturbed until leaving for university in 2006. He read History at Keble College, Oxford under the supervision of Drs Ian Archer and Mark Philpott, who taught him with patience and care the skills of the historian. He currently lives between Cyprus and Kazakhstan.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783838372327
- Sprache Englisch
- Größe H220mm x B150mm x T4mm
- Jahr 2010
- EAN 9783838372327
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 3838372328
- Veröffentlichung 08.06.2010
- Titel A Contested Identity
- Autor Sam Aldred
- Untertitel Re-examining Isaac M. Wise''s Opposition to Zionism
- Gewicht 102g
- Herausgeber LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
- Anzahl Seiten 56
- Genre Sozialwissenschaften, Recht & Wirtschaft