Interesting reading, though much was from the 1990s and early 2000s. I was unpleasantly surprised to learn that some scholars had discounted Shoah/Holocaust writing and rituals dating before the Six Day War, but I was equally glad to hear that there actually *was* a good deal written about the Shoah in the immediate aftermath thereof, reports to the contrary notwithstanding.
"The Paradoxes of American Jewish Culture," by Stephen J. Whitfield, is an essay "originally presented on April 6, 1992" (at U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor), so it's one of the older chapters in this book. That said, I enjoyed the manner in which the writer played with language. Here are a couple of samples: "The son of a Communist mother and a poet father, [Allen] Ginsberg has been the quondam bard of a lyrical Jewish leftism who opened himself to the charge of selling his birthright for a message about pot . . ." [Page 250] Regarding "help[ing] form the mass [American] culture around which a disparate people [i.e., of myriad ethnic and linguistic origins] could cohere, Whitfield write, "Amid the flux that [Alexis de] Tocqueville had emphasized, the option of consent could displace the category of descent, giving even erstwhile pariahs so many chances to hit the jackpot that the cherries, grapes, and lemons all seemed to come up at once." [Page 253]
Also noteworthy from Whitfield's chapter: " . . . traditional Judaism . . . is so exacting in its authority, so interdictory in its texture, Louis Finkelstein once remarked, that "it demands of its people what other religions demand of those in religious orders. Because Judaism demands so much, it never gets 100%." [Page 254]