Best Contemporary Jewish WritingMichael Lerner Jewish culture, identity, and spirituality through the eyes of the brightest and best authors Best Contemporary Jewish Writing is a treasure trove of short stories, poetry, and essays from such renowned contributors as Naomi Wolf, U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman, William Safire, and Marge Piercy. Dive into this rich arrayof writing and you ll see that the Jewish experience reflects universal themes. The writers in this collection have something to say to Jews, not only to those struggling with their Jewish identity, and also to the wider world. Whether your main interest is in poetry or politics, spirituality or cultural identity, social healing or individual transformation, you ll find Best Contemporary Jewish Writing to be a collection that inspires, excites, and provokes. It also reflects the diversity of thought, opinion, and sensibility of today s best known Jewish thinkers and writers. This volume is the first in the much anticipated annual series "Best Jewish Writing." |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 77
... sense of purpose and hope that I and most of my generation felt at the dawn of the 1960s . Put this all together - my inherited appreciation for what America had provided my family , the ideal of service that was fundamental to my reli ...
... sense of purpose and hope that I and most of my generation felt at the dawn of the 1960s . Put this all together - my inherited appreciation for what America had provided my family , the ideal of service that was fundamental to my reli ...
Page 248
... sense from the harm done to it and the harm yet to be done . Living in a not - hostile and harmless world means the betrayal of that sense - giving parentage . To reach completeness , to fulfill their destiny , to get rid of their ...
... sense from the harm done to it and the harm yet to be done . Living in a not - hostile and harmless world means the betrayal of that sense - giving parentage . To reach completeness , to fulfill their destiny , to get rid of their ...
Page 253
... sense of meaning gained from their hereditary victimhood and so cannot be fulfilled unless the world continually reveals open hostility , violent conspiracies , and the ever - present possibility of an- other holocaust . Yet in reading ...
... sense of meaning gained from their hereditary victimhood and so cannot be fulfilled unless the world continually reveals open hostility , violent conspiracies , and the ever - present possibility of an- other holocaust . Yet in reading ...
Contents
KENNETH KOCH | 3 |
Reversion and What Kind of Times Are These | 17 |
YEHUDA AMICHAI | 79 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adam Aharon Appelfeld American anti-Semitism Arab become Bellow Benny Morris biblical blessing Bloom Bretzky called contemporary created creation critique culture Cynthia Ozick death divine earth Egypt emergence ethical experience father feel feminist fiction Genesis God's Haganah healing Hebrew Holocaust holy Human Stain identity imagination Israel Israeli Jerusalem Jewish Renewal Jewish writing Jews Judaism Kabbalah Korinsky land literary live Malamud male meaning memory moral mother museum mystical Nathan Englander nature Nazi never novel Orthodox pain Palestine Palestinian past peace person Philip Roth Pinchas political rabbi Ravelstein Rebecca Goldstein religious Roth Roth's sacred sense sexual Shabbat social spiritual Steena story synagogue talk Talmud tell Temple things Tikkun tion Torah tradition truth turn University victims voice West Bank woman women words Yehuda Amichai Yiddish Yishuv York Zionist Zunser
References to this book
Wrestling with God and Men: Homosexuality in the Jewish Tradition Steven Greenberg Limited preview - 2004 |