How Sex Split Up the Intellectual Bromance of the 20th Century

Click Here to Read: How Sex Split Up the Intellectual Bromance of the 20th Century: Perhaps the intense oddness of the friendship between the two men reflects just how startling this idea was, and remains By Sam Dresser on the News central 24 x 7 website on November 15, 2018.

Group photo in front of Clark University: Front row: Sigmund Freud, G. Stanley Hall, C. G. Jung; Back row: Abraham A. Brill, Ernest Jones, Sándor Ferenczi. Photo taken for Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts publication..  Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

How to explain the ‘timid’ reaction of American Jewish leaders to Kristallnacht?

Click Here to Read: How to explain the ‘timid’ reaction of American Jewish leaders to Kristallnacht?: Amid the worst pogrom to take place in Germany since the Middle Ages, most US Jewish communal leaders told their constituents to keep quiet By Matt Lebovic on the Times of Israel website on November 10, 2018.

Synagogue in Hanover, Germany, set ablaze during the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 9-10, 1938 (public domain).

The Left and the Jews: A Tale of Three Countries

Click Here to Read: The Left and the Jews: A Tale of Three Countries: First in a series on the American left: Will left-wing anti-Zionists and anti-Semites in America succeed in hollowing out the traditional liberal left in the United States, as they have in Britain and France? By Paul Berman on the Tablet website on November 11, 2018.

A miniature from en:Grandes Chroniques de France depicting the expulsion of Jews from France in 1182. This is a photograph of an exhibit at the Diaspora Museum, Tel Aviv – en:Beit Hatefutsot. (Photo taken by en:User:Sodabottle)/ Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Letter to the Editor of the New York Review of Books by Nathan Szajnberg re Jean Daniel’s The Jewish Prison

To the Editors:

Adam Shatz’s articulate review of Jean Daniel’s “The Jewish Prison: A Rebellious Meditation on the State of Judaism,” sounds remarkably similar to the fundamental principles of Sandor Gilman’s 2003 critique of contemporary Jews. This is ironic and more powerful since Daniel writes as a French intellectual (influenced by his North African ethnicity) and Gilman is an American. But listen to the similarities.
Gilman insists that through history Jews have lived on the periphery of societies, and where they are found, are involved contentiously. He insists that this is a foundation of being Jewish. He suggests that Jews should not have a country of their own, lest this undermine (his concept) of being fundamentally Jewish. “Jews have always functioned as a permanent symbolic frontier” (Jewish Frontiers, p. 18). From this periphery, Jews should observe, critique others. Further, “all Diaspora societies in which Jews live … are places of contention and
complexity for Jews.” Like the “blessing” Jacob made on his deathbed to one of his sons, the Jews should eternally, or at least perpetually nip at the hind parts of others.

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