Jewish Emancipation

aw_product_id: 
36683131797
merchant_image_url: 
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
28.00
book_author_name: 
Professor David Sorkin
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Princeton University Press
published_date: 
14/09/2021
isbn: 
9780691205250
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Politics, Society & Education > Society & culture > Social groups > Religious groups
specifications: 
Professor David Sorkin|Paperback|Princeton University Press|14/09/2021
Merchant Product Id: 
9780691205250
Book Description: 
The first comprehensive history of how Jews became citizens in the modern worldFor all their unquestionable importance, the Holocaust and the founding of the State of Israel now loom so large in modern Jewish history that we have mostly lost sight of the fact that they are only part of—and indeed reactions to—the central event of that history: emancipation. In this book, David Sorkin seeks to reorient Jewish history by offering the first comprehensive account in any language of the process by which Jews became citizens with civil and political rights in the modern world. Ranging from the mid-sixteenth century to the beginning of the twenty-first, Jewish Emancipation tells the ongoing story of how Jews have gained, kept, lost, and recovered rights in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, the United States, and Israel.Emancipation, Sorkin shows, was not a one-time or linear event that began with the Enlightenment or French Revolution and culminated with Jews' acquisition of rights in Central Europe in 1867–71 or Russia in 1917. Rather, emancipation was and is a complex, multidirectional, and ambiguous process characterized by deflections and reversals, defeats and successes, triumphs and tragedies. For example, American Jews mobilized twice for emancipation: in the nineteenth century for political rights, and in the twentieth for lost civil rights. Similarly, Israel itself has struggled from the start to institute equality among its heterogeneous citizens.By telling the story of this foundational but neglected event, Jewish Emancipation reveals the lost contours of Jewish history over the past half millennium.

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