In this Issue
Named after the Jewish concept of mending and transforming a fragmented world, the magazine Tikkun offers analysis and commentary that strive to bridge the cultural divide between religious and secular progressives. By bringing together voices from many disparate religious and secular humanist communities to talk about social transformation, political change, and the evolution of our religious traditions, Tikkun creates space for the emergence of a religious Left to respond to the influence of the religious Right and the distortions of global capitalism, while simultaneously critiquing reductionist views that sometimes prevail in liberal and progressive circles. The magazine, which began as a progressive Jewish publication, provides intellectually rigorous, psychologically sophisticated, and unconventional critiques of politics, spirituality, social theory, and culture and is known for its coverage of the Israel/Palestine conflict, social justice issues, and the environment.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 33, Number 1-2, Winter/Spring 2018Table of Contents
Poetry
Politics & Society
Identity Politics
Culture
Rethinking Religion
Tikkun Recommends

-
View Holistic Islam by Kabir Helminski, and: In Days To Come by Avraham Burg, and: Renovatio, and: The New Cosmic Story by John F. Haught (review)
-
Download Holistic Islam by Kabir Helminski, and: In Days To Come by Avraham Burg, and: Renovatio, and: The New Cosmic Story by John F. Haught (review)
- Save Holistic Islam by Kabir Helminski, and: In Days To Come by Avraham Burg, and: Renovatio, and: The New Cosmic Story by John F. Haught (review)
Previous Issue
Next Issue
ISSN | 2164-0041 |
---|---|
Print ISSN | 0887-9982 |
Launched on MUSE | 2018-05-11 |
Open Access | No |
Archive Status | Archived |