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Throughout the long history of Judaism, many individuals and groups have sought to wield authority on the basis of unique religious, social, familial, military, or political claims. Moving historically from the biblical period to the modern-day State of Israel, Authority and Dissent in Jewish Life discusses a range of those claims to authority from within the Jewish community itself.

There is no single paradigm that characterizes these instances. Yet again and again the same causes of disagreement arise: interpretation and application of authoritative texts, appropriate ways to remember and memorialize figures from the past, the extent to which traditional leadership roles should (or should not) change in keeping with new cultural or political contexts, the degree to which long-held beliefs and long-practiced rituals are (or are not) susceptible to modification or abandonment, and the tension members of a Jewish community may feel when their leaders make pronouncements at odds with the political policies of the secular state in which they live. Written accessibly, the essays in this collection examine these phenomena from a wide variety of approaches, genres, and media. They pay close attention to the historical and religious settings of the controversies they analyze, yet also allow for ample reflection on the larger issues of authority and dissent that each occurrence raises.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Half-Title Page, Series Page, Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Editor's Introduction
  2. pp. ix-xiv
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. xv-xvi
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  1. Figurative Language of Authority and Rebellion in the Story of the Death of Rabbi Judah ben Bava
  2. pp. 1-12
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  1. Midrash, Oral Law, and the Question of Rabbinic Authority
  2. pp. 13-24
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  1. Dissenting Literature and Social Formation in the Antique Mediterranean
  2. pp. 25-44
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  1. When the Memory of David Is Not Enough to Authenticate the Temple in Jerusalem
  2. pp. 45-62
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  1. From Acosta and Spinoza to Arendt to Laurence and Aylon: Verbiage and Visual Art as Instruments of Dissent in Modern Jewish Thought
  2. pp. 63-84
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  1. Jewish Law and the Law of the State: A Study in Authority and Dissent
  2. pp. 85-98
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  1. "The Terrible Animal Known as the Masses": The Status and Authority of the Community Rabbi in Nineteenth Century Eastern Europe
  2. pp. 99-108
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  1. Thumbing Mendelssohn's Nose at the Nazis: Hans Pfitzner's Symphony in C, Op. 46 (1940)
  2. pp. 109-130
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  1. Not So Silent: Jewish Religious and Cultural Life in Kiev, 1945-1970s
  2. pp. 131-146
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  1. When Authority Was a Form of Dissent: Postwar Guides to Reform Practice
  2. pp. 147-166
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  1. "Dispute for the Sake of Heaven": Dissent and Multiplicity in Rav Shagar's Thought
  2. pp. 167-180
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  1. Limiting the Authority of the Country: Disobedience in the IDF
  2. pp. 181-194
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  1. Leaving the Fold: Dissent from Communal Authority in the Orthodox World?
  2. pp. 195-210
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  1. Brit without Milah: Adapting and Remixing the Dominant Ritual System
  2. pp. 211-226
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