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Alternatives to Assimilation
The Response of Reform Judaism to American Culture, 18401930
Alan Silverstein
Brandeis Series in American Jewish History, Culture, and Life
Brandeis University Press University Press of New England
1994 • 287 pp. 15 tables. 6 x 9"
Jewish Studies
$24.95 Paper, 0-87451-726-5
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Paper, 978-0-87451-726-2 |
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"Silverstein provides an important corrective to the commonplace attitude that Reform was primarily a vehicle for assimilation and loss of Jewish identification. He shows rather that Reform developed along lines parallel to Protestant churches because both religions were subject to parallel trends towards acculturation. By providing alternatives to complete assimilation, this process helped to save Judaism in America. Essential." —Choice
Explores the influence of American culture and history on the development of Reform Jewish institutions. Brandeis Series in American Jewish History, Culture, and Life.
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