Food And Judaism

by ; ;
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-01-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Nebraska Pr
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Summary

Food is not simply a popularly imagined and well-known manifestation of Jewish culture. For Jews, food has been experienced as a means of exclusion, persecution, and assimilation by the larger society. Equally important, it has been an instrument of community, reparation, and renewal of identity. Food and Judaism presents a wide range of research on the history and interpretation of Jewish food practices and meanings. This volume covers a comprehensive array of topics, including American regional manifestations of food practices from little-known Jewish communities in cities such as contemporary Brighton Beach and Memphis; a social history of Jewish food in America by the renowned expert on Jewish food, Joan Nathan; and an examination of how the American food industry appealed to early twentieth-century Jews. Several discussions on the religious meaning and personal advantages of following a vegetarian lifestyle are considered from biblical and historical perspectives. A rescued cookbook text from the Theresienstadt concentration camp is juxtaposed with an examination of how garlic in Jewish cooking served as an anti-Semitic caricature in early modern Europe. Historical perspectives are also provided on the use of separate dishes for milk and meat, the sanctification of Hasidic foods in Eastern Europe, and "mystical satiation" as found in the medieval Kabbalah. Leonard J. Greenspoon is a professor of classical and Near Eastern studies and theology and holds the Klutznick Chair in Jewish Civilization at Creighton University. Ronald A. Simkins is an associate professor of theology and director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at Creighton University. Gerald Shapiro is a professor of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Author Biography

Leonard J. Greenspoon is a professor of classical and Near Eastern studies and theology and holds the Klutznick Chair in Jewish Civilization at Creighton University. Ronald A. Simkins is an associate professor of theology and director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at Creighton University. Gerald Shapiro is a professor of English at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Editor's Introduction xii
Contributors xv
A Social History of Jewish Food in America
1(14)
Joan Nathan
Smoked Salmon Sushi and Sturgeon Stomachs: The Russian Jewish Foodscapes of New York
15(12)
Eve Jochnowitz
The Art of Jewish Food
27(40)
Ori Z. Soltes
Exploring Southern Jewish Foodways
67(12)
Marcie Cohen Ferris
The Vegetarian Alternative: Biblical Adumbrations, Modern Reverberations
79(26)
S. Daniel Breslauer
In Memory's Kitchen: Reflections on a Recently Discovered Form of Holocaust Literature
105(14)
Cara De Silva
Does God Care What We Eat? Jewish Theologies of Food and Reverence for Life
119(14)
Jonathan D. Brumberg-Kraus
Nebraska Jewish Charitable Cookbooks, 1901-2002
133(16)
Oliver B. Pollak
Public and Private in the Kitchen: Eating Jewish in the Soviet State
149(20)
Alice Stone Nakhimovsky
Kashrut: The Possibility and Limits of Women's Domestic Power
169(24)
Ruth Ann Abusch-Magder
Holy Kugel: The Sanctification of Ashkenazic Ethnic Foods in Hasidism
193(22)
Allan Nadler
``As the Jews Like to Eat Garlick'': Garlic in Christian-Jewish Polemical Discourse in Early Modern Germany
215(20)
Maria Diemling
Separating the Dishes: The History of a Jewish Eating Practice
235(22)
David Kraemer
The Blessing in the Belly: Mystical Satiation in Medieval Kabbalah
257(24)
Joel Hecker
Food of the Book or Food of Israel? Israelite and Jewish Food Laws in the Muslim Exegesis of Quran 3:93
281(16)
Brannon Wheeler
Meals as Midrash: A Survey of Ancient Meals in Jewish Studies Scholarship
297(22)
Jonathan D. Brumberg-Kraus
The Vegetarian Ideal in the Bible
319(16)
Gary A. Rendsburg
Food Fight: The Americanization of Kashrut in Twentieth-Century America
335
Jenna Weissman Joselit

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