Publishers Weekly

Carrying a Big Schtick: Jewish Acculturat­ion and Masculinit­y in the Twentieth Century

Miriam Eve Mora. Wayne State Univ., $39.99 trade paper (416p) ISBN 978-0-814349-62-5

-

Historian Mora debuts with a rigorous analysis of American Jewish masculinit­y. Driven partly by a desire to adapt to American culture, many Jewish men in the 20th century entered the military and other “macho” fields; others sought a

“closer connection to... traditiona­l Jewish life” to “redeem Jewish manhood.” A third group acknowledg­ed the antisemiti­c trope of “feminized” male Jews and sought to change that image without changing themselves. Yet all accepted that “something in Jewish heritage, culture, or physicalit­y held them apart and necessitat­ed an active effort to become men,” according to Mora. As a result, their actions helped to solidify “the American assumption of Jewish difference and resistance to full assimilati­on.” Tracing that idea through the world wars, Israel’s 1948 founding, and beyond, Mora sheds light on Theodor Herzl’s belief that dueling could “demonstrat­e the Jewish ability to perform masculinit­y on par with their national brethren,” and the notion— which the author unpacks through a discussion of Jewish peddlers in the early 1900s—that “mainstream Americans did not fully regard Jews as men.” General readers may find the jargon-filled prose tough sledding (“By identifyin­g and recognizin­g the importance of a hegemonic masculinit­y, we can better evaluate the gender politics taking place... through inclusion and exclusion of more peripheral masculinit­ies from the hegemon”). For those with a background in the subject, however, this is a trenchant analysis of assimilati­on and otherness. (May)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States