Skip to content

Black Power, Jewish Politics

Marc Dollinger

Reinventing the Alliance in the 1960s, Revised Edition

Barcode 9781479826889
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £70.31 - Original price £70.31
Original price
£70.31
£70.31 - £70.31
Current price £70.31

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 02/04/2024

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Sub-Genre: Literary Criticism
Label: New York University Press
Series: Goldstein-Goren Series in American Jewish History
Contributors: Ilana Kaufman (Afterword by)
Language: English
Publisher: New York University Press

Reinventing the Alliance in the 1960s, Revised Edition

Highlights Jewish participation in the civil rights movement

Black Power, Jewish Politics charts the transformation of American Jewish political culture from the Cold War liberal consensus of the early postwar years to the rise and influence of Black Power-inspired ethnic nationalism. It shows how, in a period best known for the rise of antisemitism in some parts of the Black community and the breakdown of the alliance between white Jews and Black Americans, Black Power activists enabled Jewish activists to devise a new Judeo-centered political agenda—including the emancipation of Soviet Jews, the rise of Jewish Day Schools, the revitalization of worship services with gender-inclusive liturgy, and the birth of a new form of American Zionism.
Undermining widely held beliefs about the civil rights movement, Black Power, racism, Soviet Jewry, American Zionism, and the religious revival of the 1970s, Black Power, Jewish Politics describes a new political consensus based on identity politics that drew Black and Jewish Americans together and altered the course of American liberalism.
In the midst of national reckoning on race, this revised edition extends the book's thesis to the contemporary period, investigating the limits of white Jewish liberalism, the ways in which scholars have and have not addressed racial privilege in their work, and the dynamics around these themes in a much more diverse American Jewish community.