Power & Powerlessness in Jewish History
By (Author) David Biale
Random House USA Inc
Random House Inc
1st December 1988
United States
General
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
909.04924
Paperback
256
Width 140mm, Height 213mm, Spine 15mm
296g
WINNER OF THE 1987 JWB NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD FOR HISTORY In this radical reinterpretation of Jewish history, David Biale tackles the myth of Jewish political passivity between the fall of an independent Jewish Commonwealth in 70 C.E. and the rebirth of the state of Israel in 1948. He argues that Jews throughout history demonstrated a savvy understanding of political life; they were neither as powerless as the memory of the Holocaust years would suggest nor as powerful as the as the contemporary state of Israel would imply.
The most important point of David Biales valuable study is that Jewish political history extends across the centuries of the Diaspora; it is a continuous history, not one cut off at the fall of the Second Jewish Commonwealth. Biale is especially good at evoking the internal life of those autonomous or semi-autonomous communities within which the political sensibility of contemporary Jews first took shape.
Michael Walzer
A relevant and studious book that should interest readers of Jewish history or anyone interested in Israels place in todays world.
Booklist
His succinct, thoroughly researched, insightful arguments . . . are sure to spark controversy.
Publishers Weekly
Biales work demonstrates the best of contemporary Jewish scholarship. Historically informed and critically based, it is a brave work attacking a metahistory of the Jewish people and unmasking propagandists and those who would mystify rather than write truth.
Jewish Exponent
DAVID BIALEis the Koret Associate Professor of Jewish History and Director of the Center for Judaic Studies at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California. He won the JWB National Jewish Book Award in 1980 for his previous book, Gershom Scholem- Kabbalah and Counter-History.