Making the Bible Modern

Making the Bible Modern
Author: Penny Schine Gold
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2018-10-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1501724983

The Bible has played a critical role in the story of Judaism, modernity, and identity. Penny Schine Gold examines the arena of children's education and the role of the Bible in the reshaping of Jewish identity, especially in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s, when a second generation of Eastern European Jews engaged the task of Americanizing Jewish culture, religion, and institutions. Professional Jewish educators based in the Reform movement undertook a multifaceted agenda for the Bible in America: to modernize it, harmonize it with American values, and move it to the center of the religious school curriculum. Through public schooling, the children of Jewish immigrants brought America home; it was up to the adults to fashion a Judaism that their children could take back out into America. Because of its historic role in the development of Judaism and its cultural significance in American life, Gold finds, the Bible provided Jews with vital links to both the past and the present. The ancient sacred text of the Bible, transformed into highly abridged and amended "Bible tales," was brought into service as a bridge between tradition and modernity.Gold analyzes these American developments with reference to the intellectual history of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe, innovations in public schooling and social theory, Protestant religious education, and later versions of children's Bibles in the United States and Israel. She shows that these seemingly simple children's books are complex markers of the pressing concerns of Jews in the modern world.

The Bible for Children

The Bible for Children
Author: Ruth B. Bottigheimer
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 362
Release: 1996-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780300064889

For more than five centuries, parents, teachers, and preachers in Europe and America have written and illustrated Bibles especially for children. These children's Bibles vary widely, featuring different stories, various interpretations, and markedly divergent illustrations, despite their common source. How children's Bibles differ, and why, is the subject of this ground-breaking book, the first to recognize children's Bibles as a distinct genre with its own literary, historical, and cultural significance.

Horace

Horace
Author: Horace
Publisher:
Total Pages: 910
Release: 1827
Genre:
ISBN:

Judaism and Its Bible

Judaism and Its Bible
Author: Frederick E. Greenspahn
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2023
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0827615108

Judaism and Its Bible explores the profoundly deep yet complex relationship between Jews, Judaism, and the Hebrew Bible, describing the extraordinary two-and-a-half-millennia journey of a people and its book that has changed the world.

Dual Allegiance

Dual Allegiance
Author: Moshe Gresser
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1438404816

Using Freud's correspondence, this book argues that his Jewishness was in fact a source of energy and pride for him and that he identified with both Jewish and humanist traditions. Gresser presents an extended analysis of Freud's personal correspondence. Arranged in chronological order, the material conveys a vivid sense of Freud's personal and psychological development. Close reading of Freud's letters, with frequent attention to the original German and its cultural context, allows Gresser to weave a fascinating story of Freud's life and Jewish commitments, as seen through the words of the master himself. The book culminates in an extended discussion of Freud's last and most deliberately Jewish work, Moses and Monotheism. Gresser thus initiates a discussion about modern Jewish identity that will be of interest to anyone concerned about questions of the relationship between tradition and modernity, and between the particular and the universal, that moderns struggle with in the search for authenticity.

The Legacy of German Jewry

The Legacy of German Jewry
Author: Hermann Levin Goldschmidt
Publisher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2007
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0823228266

This volume is a comprehensive rethinking of the German-Jewish experience. Goldschmidt challenges the elegiac view of Gershom Scholem, showing us the German-Jewish legacy in literature, philosophy and critical thought in a new light.