Ken Koltun-Fromm, Imagining Jewish Authenticity: Vision and Text in American Jewish Thought. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2015. 266 pp.

This chapter reviews the book Imagining Jewish Authenticity: Vision and Text in American Jewish Thought (2015), by Ken Koltun-Fromm. Imagining Jewish Authenticity examines the ways in which texts and images interact in American Jewish culture to promote a vision of Jewish “authenticity,” while also highlighting the deep anxieties harbored by Jews with respect to their own identities. Koltun-Fromm argues that claims of authenticity are most perceptible in both the conscious and unconscious interface between text and image, which provides authors and artists with an outlet to make the contradictory claims at the root of neurotic conflict. He identifies three hotbeds of social and political tensions that have sat at the center of Jewish anxieties in the modern era: Jewish space, the Sabbath, and Jewish food. The book also explores “how Jews deploy language in texts to materialize authenticity in Jewish, gendered, and racial bodies.”

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
A. W. Strouse

This introduction describes the surprisingly frequent invocation of circumcision and uncircumcision as a multifaceted metaphor from antiquity, through the medieval period, into modernity. Circumcision as a signifier of sacrality figures heavily in Jewish thought, while in classical and Hellenistic Greece, the presence of an intact foreskin signified self-control and the avoidance of excess. These conceptions influenced novel Christian theological and literary invocations of the prepuce throughout antiquity and the European Middle Ages, persisting down to the modern era, as in the notable case of Ezra Pound musing that he had gestated Eliot’s “The Waste Land” in his foreskin.


2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 393-393
Author(s):  
TAMAR BARZEL

In JSAM 4(2), on page 220, note 17, and on 246, the citation for John Brackett's book is given incorrectly. It should read as follows:John Brackett, John Zorn: Tradition and Transgression. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2008.The author apologizes for this error.


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