Description

Book Synopsis

Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic Tradition is a groundbreaking collection that introduces the reader to applied ethics and examines various social issues from contemporary and largely under-represented, Jewish ethical perspectives. For thousands of years, a rich and complex system of Jewish ethics has provided guidance about which values we should uphold and utilize to confront concrete problems, create a healthy social fabric, and inspire meaningful lives. Despite its longevity and richness, many Judaic and secular scholars have misconstrued this ethical tradition as a strictly religious and biblically based system that primarily applies to observant Jews, rather than viewing it as an ethical system that can provide unique and helpful insights to anyone, religious or not. This pioneering collection offers a deep, broad, and inclusive understanding of Jewish ethical ideas that challenges these misconceptions. The chapters explain and apply these ethical ideas to contemporary issues connected to racial justice, immigration, gender justice, queer identity, and economic and environmental justice in ways that illustrate their relevance for Jews and non-Jews alike.



Trade Review

Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic Tradition offers readers a long-overdue interdisciplinary interpretation of Jewish ethics accompanied by a clear account of how Jewish moral concepts can expand our basic understandings of todays’ most thorny social problems. Wolf and Thompson make a clear and concise case for why applied ethics needs Jewish ethics. Their carefully curated anthology counters misconceptions about Jewish ethics with accessible explanations of basic Jewish moral principles. Contributors to the volume illustrate the normative power of these principles through a series of engagements with questions of environment justice, immigration, gender justice, queer identities, and more. Anyone curious about Jewish applied ethics should start with this book!

-- Alison Bailey, Illinois State University

Table of Contents

Part I: What is Jewish Ethics?

Chapter 1: An Overview of Secular Ethics and Applied Ethics

Allison B. Wolf

Chapter 2: What is Jewish Ethics?

Jennifer A. Thompson

Part II: Applying Jewish Ethics

A Jewish Social Fabric

Chapter 3: Jewish Perspectives on Charity: A Philosophy for Hopeless Times

Leah Kalmanson

Chapter 4: Beyond the Binary of Silence and Speech: What Jewish Liturgy and Spirals Reveal about the Limits and Potentials of Spiritual Caregiving for Survivors of Sexual Violence

Lena Sclove

Chapter 5: A Social Fabric of Interdependence: The Ethics of Care Work

Jennifer A. Thompson

Part III: Being and Belonging

Chapter 6: Not in My Name: Jewishness, Womanhood, and the Ethics of Identification

Naomi Scheman

Chapter 7: Failed Messiah: H. Leivick’s Der Goylem and the Ethics of Action

Melissa Weininger

Part IV: Enacting Justice

Chapter 8: Hans Jonas’ Ethics of Responsibility in an Age of Pervasive Technology

Andrea Lehner

Chapter 9: Views from Far and Near: Jewish Memory and Culture in the Aftermath of Violence in Argentina

Natasha Zaretsky

Chapter 10: A Judaic Approach to Immigration (In)Justice in the Americas.

Allison B. Wolf

Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic

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    A Hardback by Jennifer A. Thompson, Allison B. Wolf, Leah Kalmanson

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      View other formats and editions of Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic by Jennifer A. Thompson

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 22/12/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793655301, 978-1793655301
      ISBN10: 1793655308

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic Tradition is a groundbreaking collection that introduces the reader to applied ethics and examines various social issues from contemporary and largely under-represented, Jewish ethical perspectives. For thousands of years, a rich and complex system of Jewish ethics has provided guidance about which values we should uphold and utilize to confront concrete problems, create a healthy social fabric, and inspire meaningful lives. Despite its longevity and richness, many Judaic and secular scholars have misconstrued this ethical tradition as a strictly religious and biblically based system that primarily applies to observant Jews, rather than viewing it as an ethical system that can provide unique and helpful insights to anyone, religious or not. This pioneering collection offers a deep, broad, and inclusive understanding of Jewish ethical ideas that challenges these misconceptions. The chapters explain and apply these ethical ideas to contemporary issues connected to racial justice, immigration, gender justice, queer identity, and economic and environmental justice in ways that illustrate their relevance for Jews and non-Jews alike.



      Trade Review

      Applying Jewish Ethics: Beyond the Rabbinic Tradition offers readers a long-overdue interdisciplinary interpretation of Jewish ethics accompanied by a clear account of how Jewish moral concepts can expand our basic understandings of todays’ most thorny social problems. Wolf and Thompson make a clear and concise case for why applied ethics needs Jewish ethics. Their carefully curated anthology counters misconceptions about Jewish ethics with accessible explanations of basic Jewish moral principles. Contributors to the volume illustrate the normative power of these principles through a series of engagements with questions of environment justice, immigration, gender justice, queer identities, and more. Anyone curious about Jewish applied ethics should start with this book!

      -- Alison Bailey, Illinois State University

      Table of Contents

      Part I: What is Jewish Ethics?

      Chapter 1: An Overview of Secular Ethics and Applied Ethics

      Allison B. Wolf

      Chapter 2: What is Jewish Ethics?

      Jennifer A. Thompson

      Part II: Applying Jewish Ethics

      A Jewish Social Fabric

      Chapter 3: Jewish Perspectives on Charity: A Philosophy for Hopeless Times

      Leah Kalmanson

      Chapter 4: Beyond the Binary of Silence and Speech: What Jewish Liturgy and Spirals Reveal about the Limits and Potentials of Spiritual Caregiving for Survivors of Sexual Violence

      Lena Sclove

      Chapter 5: A Social Fabric of Interdependence: The Ethics of Care Work

      Jennifer A. Thompson

      Part III: Being and Belonging

      Chapter 6: Not in My Name: Jewishness, Womanhood, and the Ethics of Identification

      Naomi Scheman

      Chapter 7: Failed Messiah: H. Leivick’s Der Goylem and the Ethics of Action

      Melissa Weininger

      Part IV: Enacting Justice

      Chapter 8: Hans Jonas’ Ethics of Responsibility in an Age of Pervasive Technology

      Andrea Lehner

      Chapter 9: Views from Far and Near: Jewish Memory and Culture in the Aftermath of Violence in Argentina

      Natasha Zaretsky

      Chapter 10: A Judaic Approach to Immigration (In)Justice in the Americas.

      Allison B. Wolf

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