The emotional experience of Jewish Secularization since the Early Modern era

Shmuel Feiner author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Liverpool University Press

Publishing:13th Jan '26

£85.00

This title is due to be published on 13th January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The emotional experience of Jewish Secularization since the Early Modern era cover

This book gives voice to the experiences of secularization based on much new and illuminating research, making it possible to observe the current, vociferous discourse in the context of the deep and long-term historical processes. The book is laid out in four “Acts” that open windows through which one may view the various experiences of secularization. One hears many contradictory voices of hope and despair, enthusiasm and frustration, anger, rebellion, alienation, apprehension, and pain.

In the various acts between the sixteenth and the early twentieth centuries, secularization as a historical process was expressed in many modes, on the spectrum between soft and radical, some of them very intimate, which were bound up with experiences of pain, panic, alienation, and betrayal. Secularization is a powerful force that gave rise to unprecedented global change in private lives, in society, in the nation, and in the state in the modern age. It also shaped Jewish religion as it is known today and gave rise to defensive and militant orthodoxy, to political and religious frameworks, to humanistic and liberal Judaism, and to other ways of creating a secular Jewish culture as an alternative to religion. In the various acts between the sixteenth and the early twentieth centuries, secularization as a historical process was expressed in many modes, on the spectrum between soft and radical, some of them very intimate, which were bound up with experiences of pain, panic, alienation, and betrayal.

ISBN: 9781805960003

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

240 pages