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Reflections on Identity: The Jewish Case

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Two basic approaches have shaped the identity discourse since antiquity. The essentialist view assumes that a person's identity does exist "somewhere," and the discourse on identity is an attempt to disclose it. People do not create their identity, they only realize it. The opposite, deconstructionist view, assumes that the identity is only a linguistic fiction; we have no identity outside our concrete history, which reflects a constantly ongoing dynamic change. The present book offers a third option. It accepts that identity is not a priori datum that precedes our existence but claims we do have a set historical cultural identity it calls "primary," expressing a permanent foundation of our biography. On its basis, we build our concrete identity. Engaging in a critical analysis, the book exposes the foundations and the borders of the identity field. As a test case that illustrates its claims, it presents the discourse on Jewish identity. Lively, vigorous, and widely recorded, this discourse conveys many nuances of the tension between continuity and change and is thus uniquely fit to convey the significance of the identity discourse.

270 pages, Hardcover

Published December 30, 2016

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About the author

Avi Sagi

36 books2 followers
Avi (Avraham) Sagi (Schweitzer) (Hebrew: אבי שגיא) is a philosopher and researcher of Jewish philosophy. He is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at Bar-Ilan University.

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