Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis

A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 August 2021) | Viewed by 22570

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Department of Religious Studies, 292 UCB, Eaton Humanities, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, 80309-0292, USA
Interests: Jewish thought; philosophy of religion; theories of religion; Jewish-Christian relations; religion and ethics; religion and politics; hermeneutics

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Guest Editor
Department of Religious Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3225, USA
Interests: modern Jewish thought; gender; continental philosophy; post-Holocaust ethics; cultural studies; critical animal studies

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

This issue will examine encounters between Jewish thought and crisis (with both terms being broadly defined), exploring ways in which Jewish thinkers have generated, navigated, and overcome crises and ruptures. The issue will explore earlier encounters between crisis and Jewish thought in diverse historical contexts while also foregrounding interactions between Jewish thought and current states of crisis in public health, racial justice, democracy, contingent labor, academia, and beyond. By focusing on the concept and very real presence of crisis, we aim to expand the scope of traditional approaches in the field by bringing new projects, perspectives, and voices into conversation with one another. It is the goal of this special issue to address developments, breakdowns, and conflicts in Jewish thought—in how the field constructs itself, how its figures (both prominent and less well-known) have responded to past times of crisis, and how present researchers may reshape its contours by demanding that the canon speak to contemporary urgent concerns. In so doing, we hope to bring to the fore diverse voices not only from types of sources that have traditionally been included in the field (from philosophical works to biblical and rabbinic commentaries), but also from genres that have received far less attention as sites of Jewish thought (from novels to memoirs to poetry).

We welcome papers that deal with topics such as:

  • Public health. What are constructive ethical and theological responses to public health emergencies, and how might we re-examine concepts central to contemporary Jewish thought, such as dialogue, face-to-face relationality, and intersubjectivity, in times of contagion?
  • The climate crisis and interactions with the more-than-human world. How have Jewish thinkers employed strategies that model how to mend ruptures to multispecies communities, and contrastingly, how have they (or their interlocutors) failed to confront global catastrophes?
  • Race and racial justice. How might the field of Jewish thought need to be reimagined and transformed in conversation with movements for racial justice, and what resources (if any) does the field have to offer such movements?
  • Democracy and politics. How have Jewish thinkers responded to breakdowns in democratic values and practice, and how might such responses inform—and be challenged by—contemporary civic life?
  • Pedagogy and the academy. How can the field of Jewish thought speak to current pedagogical climates of disruption and risk, in which educators (and administrators) must navigate new types of teaching environments, pedagogical challenges, and institutional pressures? How can Jewish thought and Jewish studies survive in a time of crisis, in which the academic fields housing and closely linked to these areas of inquiry are often targeted for elimination?
  • Why turn to the tradition of Jewish thought in a time of crisis at all? To what extent does comparing historical responses to crisis with current approaches constitute a form of anachronism, and how can we employ anachronism productively in the face of contemporary challenges?

Dr. Elias Sacks
Dr. Andrea Dara Cooper
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • Judaism
  • Jewish thought
  • philosophy
  • crisis
  • public health
  • race
  • democracy
  • politics
  • ethics
  • dialogue
  • intersubjectivity
  • higher education
  • pedagogy
  • climate
  • multispecies communities
  • history

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Published Papers (9 papers)

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Research

12 pages, 343 KiB  
Article
The Talmudic Rabbi as Triage Officer: Decision-Making in Times of COVID-19
by George Y. Kohler
Religions 2024, 15(3), 344; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15030344 - 13 Mar 2024
Viewed by 1037
Abstract
The essay outlines a four-phase triage process made by a fictive Talmudic rabbi working on an equally fictive hospital COVID-19 ward. The rabbi bases his decision on four different Talmudic texts, proceeding one by one, with each text building on the preceding one, [...] Read more.
The essay outlines a four-phase triage process made by a fictive Talmudic rabbi working on an equally fictive hospital COVID-19 ward. The rabbi bases his decision on four different Talmudic texts, proceeding one by one, with each text building on the preceding one, until he is ready to allocate his scarce medical resources to one of the patients, thus being forced to deny them to others. Along the way, the paper will examine how this Talmudic reasoning can also be applied to the patient, or even a potential patient, clarifying the demands of the individual’s ethical responsibility to avoid triage situations in the first place through social distancing and even more so through getting vaccinated. The paper argues that the rabbi has a number of Talmudic tools at hand that make his decision easier, not because he strictly follows Jewish law, but because of the rich experience standing behind Jewish legal traditions, making a universally valid ethical justification of difficult decisions possible. The essay proposes that including such theological material in triage guidelines would help make those decisions more acceptable in the long run, especially for societies in which religious traditions still play a certain role in the cultural consciousness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
18 pages, 332 KiB  
Article
Torah Trumps Life: Reflections on Uncivil Religion and Haredi Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
by Zachary J. Braiterman
Religions 2023, 14(7), 946; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070946 - 24 Jul 2023
Viewed by 1700
Abstract
As if by design, crisis reveals basic structural fault lines. In the middle of the COVID-19 crisis, non-Haredi Jews expressed surprise and even outrage about the ultra-orthodox Haredi response to the pandemic. It was not understood how large-scale violations of public health protocols [...] Read more.
As if by design, crisis reveals basic structural fault lines. In the middle of the COVID-19 crisis, non-Haredi Jews expressed surprise and even outrage about the ultra-orthodox Haredi response to the pandemic. It was not understood how large-scale violations of public health protocols comported with the legal-halakhic principle of Pikuaḥ Nefesh (saving human life). In this essay, I explore Hasidic response to COVID-19 as reported in the secular and Haredi press and in emergent social science literature about this crisis. I place Haredi response to crisis in relation to the clash between two sets of values: the value of saving human life and the value of intensive Talmud study (talmud Torah) and ritual-communal practice. In what Robert Cover called a paideic nomos, there are more important things than human life. What we see already in the Babylonian Talmud is the profound ambiguity of paideic norms vis-à-vis the larger public good. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
21 pages, 994 KiB  
Article
“God Has Wrapped Himself in a Cloak of Materialism”: Marxism and Jewish Religious Thought in the Early Soviet Union
by Isaac Slater
Religions 2023, 14(5), 673; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050673 - 18 May 2023
Viewed by 2005
Abstract
Jewish religious life in the Soviet Union is typically the subject of dichotomous depictions that offer only a superficial rendering of this rich and complex environment. This paper aims to complicate this image by pointing out several religious thinkers who engaged with Communist [...] Read more.
Jewish religious life in the Soviet Union is typically the subject of dichotomous depictions that offer only a superficial rendering of this rich and complex environment. This paper aims to complicate this image by pointing out several religious thinkers who engaged with Communist and Marxist ideas and incorporated them into their religious thought, while upholding rabbinic culture. Among the figures and themes examined are Alter Hilewitz’s (1906–1994) Hasido-Marxism, Rabbi Avraham Yosef Guttman’s (1870–1940) crisis of faith, and Shmuel Alexandrov’s (1865–1941) use of Russian Nietzscheanism. Alexandrov was also the narrator who revealed these fascinating ideas to us in a rare collection of his letters, which possesses both a philosophical and a theological nature. These letters, which have received very little attention in previous studies, provide a small window into the conflictual world of rabbis and yeshiva students in the first decade of the Soviet Union. Reviewing the ideas generated in a struggle to make sense of one of the great crises of modern Judaism, and pondering questions of historical perspective and how empathy may distort it, this article wishes to go beyond the image of a defensive preservation of religious life and to re-envision this unique and innovative period of Jewish thought. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
12 pages, 768 KiB  
Article
Difficult Jewish Texts and Contemporary Political Crisis
by Emily Filler
Religions 2023, 14(5), 652; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050652 - 15 May 2023
Viewed by 2419
Abstract
This essay considers the phenomenon of public Jewish biblical quotation, such as, for instance, “justice, justice shall you pursue,” in times of contemporary political crisis. I argue that these references tend to employ a sanitized and selective hermeneutics which overlooks and bypasses the [...] Read more.
This essay considers the phenomenon of public Jewish biblical quotation, such as, for instance, “justice, justice shall you pursue,” in times of contemporary political crisis. I argue that these references tend to employ a sanitized and selective hermeneutics which overlooks and bypasses the violent or otherwise “difficult” themes of these works and suggest that there is a parallel between our refusal to come to terms with the frequent violence in many texts, and our inability to acknowledge the intensity and scope of the “real world” crises we employ these texts to respond to. Delving into the complex biblical narrative of Korach as an example, I propose that particular attention to difficult texts invites Jewish communities not only to confront the darker parts of the textual tradition, but also provides a communal model for acknowledging the true depths of a crisis, textual or political, instead of turning quickly to palliative solutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
20 pages, 662 KiB  
Article
The Ark and Other Bubbles: Jewish Philosophy and Surviving the Disaster
by Dustin Atlas
Religions 2022, 13(12), 1152; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121152 - 25 Nov 2022
Viewed by 1786
Abstract
The story of Noah is the story of a near-total biocide. And yet, in popular imagination, it appears as more of a floating petting zoo, a charming menagerie that follows the far more serious Edenic storylines of Genesis 1–5. In this paper, the [...] Read more.
The story of Noah is the story of a near-total biocide. And yet, in popular imagination, it appears as more of a floating petting zoo, a charming menagerie that follows the far more serious Edenic storylines of Genesis 1–5. In this paper, the ark, and midrash it inspired, acts as a guide for a set of speculations and arguments about the role Jewish philosophy might play during the present ecological disaster. These speculations are guided by the following claim: Jewish philosophy best responds to ecological crises when it does not attempt to provide an ecological ethics “out of the sources of Judaism”—making expansive normative and metaphysical claims—but instead explores enclosures and spaces; when it thinks about our relation to disasters, rather than trying to prevent or solve them. In other words, there is an element of Jewish thought which attempts to think enclosures and protect small but important things in the midst of disasters, and it is this I wish to highlight. My goal is to demonstrate that this kind of thinking presents viable possibilities for ecological thought. Specifically, I will argue that Mara Benjamin’s work gives us an indication of where such philosophy can go and how it might get there. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
16 pages, 293 KiB  
Article
“There Is No ‘Away:’” Ecological Fact as Jewish Theological Problem
by Mara H. Benjamin
Religions 2022, 13(4), 290; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040290 - 28 Mar 2022
Viewed by 3356
Abstract
The “second law of ecology”—that all matter remains part of the earthly ecosystem—poses a theological challenge to Jewish monotheisms. Climate change has further underscored the urgency of understanding and acting in light of the interconnected materiality of the world. Yet Jewish theological discourse [...] Read more.
The “second law of ecology”—that all matter remains part of the earthly ecosystem—poses a theological challenge to Jewish monotheisms. Climate change has further underscored the urgency of understanding and acting in light of the interconnected materiality of the world. Yet Jewish theological discourse has remained largely detached from broader planetary conditions and from the metabolization of these conditions in the environmental humanities. The few contemporary Jewish theologians who recognize ecological crisis as worthy of comment have largely responded to it by propping up apologetic accounts of Jewish theology and ethics that rely on a construction of the divine as outside of the world. I argue that ecological crisis reveals the inadequacy of extant approaches to Jewish theology, which either promote ethical monotheism and a stewardship model of relation to the nonhuman world or claim to promote divine immanence while nonetheless reinscribing human dominion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
10 pages, 241 KiB  
Article
Jacob Gordin: The Religious Crisis in Jewish Thought
by Ori Werdiger
Religions 2022, 13(1), 44; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010044 - 1 Jan 2022
Viewed by 2819
Abstract
This article offers an English translation of an essay published in 1946 by Jacob Gordin (1896–1947), a Russian-Jewish philosopher of religion, who is considered the founding figure of the postwar Paris School of Jewish Thought (École de pensée juive de Paris). In “The [...] Read more.
This article offers an English translation of an essay published in 1946 by Jacob Gordin (1896–1947), a Russian-Jewish philosopher of religion, who is considered the founding figure of the postwar Paris School of Jewish Thought (École de pensée juive de Paris). In “The Religious Crisis in Jewish Thought”, Gordin presented a sweeping meta-narrative of the history of Jewish thought, formulated as a history of repeated “religious crises”, both existential and intellectual. In Gordin’s condensed narrative, these crises could be detected in the life and philosophy of the most canonical Jewish thinkers inside and outside the tradition: from Abraham the biblical patriarch to Hermann Cohen, through a diverse list including the rabbinical sage Elisha Ben-Abuyah, Philo, Halevi, Maimonides, and Spinoza. In an introduction to Gordin’s text, I provide a brief biography, locate Gordin in existentialist discourse of the early postwar years, and discuss the affinities between Gordin’s “The Religious Crisis” and Levinas’s and Sartre’s early reflections on the Jewish question. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
15 pages, 369 KiB  
Article
A Therapeutic Medium?: Crisis and History in Oracula Sibyllina 4
by Miguel M. Vargas
Religions 2021, 12(11), 915; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110915 - 21 Oct 2021
Viewed by 1865
Abstract
This article argues that the oracles of Oracula Sibyllina 4 interpreted and responded to specific crises facing ancient Mediterranean Jewish and pagan communities. With this in mind, it advances the idea that the text can be read as a Jewish reaction to the [...] Read more.
This article argues that the oracles of Oracula Sibyllina 4 interpreted and responded to specific crises facing ancient Mediterranean Jewish and pagan communities. With this in mind, it advances the idea that the text can be read as a Jewish reaction to the fall of the Jerusalem temple in 70 CE, which is a reading that recent scholarship has been hesitant to accept. Rather than read Oracula Sibyllina 4 as a reflection of the author’s pre-existing views, the present article approaches the text as a creative medium through which a new historical consciousness was crafted, one that accommodated the fall of the temple and the events surrounding its destruction. To do so, the article briefly contextualizes the text to demonstrate that crisis-mediation was an expected task of ancient Sibylline literature, then proceeds to interpret the contentious passages that have led scholars to offer alternative readings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
27 pages, 4767 KiB  
Article
Yedidyah Ha-Alexandri and the Crisis of the Modern Jewish Age: Philo of Alexandria as an Exemplary Ḥasid in Naḥman Krochmal’s Thought
by Ze’ev Strauss
Religions 2021, 12(6), 377; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060377 - 22 May 2021
Viewed by 2978
Abstract
The present article sets out to answer the question of the extent to which Naḥman Krochmal’s reappraisal of Philo of Alexandria in the light of his Jewish faith reflects a deep spiritual crisis that was engulfing the Maskilic world: the encroaching expansion of [...] Read more.
The present article sets out to answer the question of the extent to which Naḥman Krochmal’s reappraisal of Philo of Alexandria in the light of his Jewish faith reflects a deep spiritual crisis that was engulfing the Maskilic world: the encroaching expansion of modern Hasidism with its transformed understanding of traditional Judaism among Eastern European communities. To this end, a major component of Krochmal’s Jewish historical thought as expressed in his masterful unfinished work Guide of the Perplexed of the Modern Age can be revealed. The examination employs two methods in order to uncover the intent behind Krochmal’s fragmentary presentation of Philo: exploring his utilization of Dähne’s Geschichtliche Darstellung der jüdisch-alexandrinischen Religionsphilosophie to demonstrate the congruence of Philo’s thought with Tannaitic ethics and drawing on similar depictions of Philo found among his circles and pupils. The study claims that Krochmal’s revival of Philo as a key Jewish thinker is politically mobilized for an ideological assault on the Hasidim, with whom the Maskilim had ongoing conflicts. Reconstructing his portrayal of Philo as a paragon of Second Temple Judaism, the paper argues that Krochmal projects his own spiritual crisis from the Maskilic settings of nineteenth-century Galicia onto the Jewish reality of first-century Alexandria, thus reproducing a valiant image of Philo as the embodiment of the Maskilic consciousness that was grappling with the ancient, overly theoretical Hasideans of his days. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Jewish Thought in Times of Crisis)
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