Beyond the Secular-Religion Divide: Judaism and the New Secularity

Author:

Rashkover Randi Lynn1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Religious Studies, William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA 23185, USA

Abstract

In his 2018 survey of twenty-first-century American Judaism entitled The New American Judaism: How Jews Practice their Judaism Today, Jack Wertheimer references a 2015 Pew Research study that presupposes the secular-religion binary as the analytical metric for its determination that both the American public and American Jews are becoming less religious. Nonetheless, Wertheimer’s use of this analytical frame prohibits him from making sense of many details of the twenty-first-century American Jewish life that he seeks to describe. Indeed, any survey of the contemporary American Jewish scene is remiss if it does not discuss the rise of orthodox Jewish feminism, current trends towards substantial denominational change, and/or the emergence of a “post-ethnic” Judaism. Even so, recent historical-ethnographic accounts have outpaced analytical challenges to the secular-religion binary. Contemporary historians and ethnographers find themselves forced to choose between an analytically deficient model and a default rejection of analytical tools altogether. Arguably, the roots of the current impasse are derived from the influence of what scholars refer to as the secularization thesis. Therefore, to overcome this impasse, ethnographers and historians of American Judaism need access to a more refined categorical lens. In this essay, I argue that they may find the analytical support they need by turning away from the secularization thesis and turning toward far more complex accounts of the relationship between Judaism and modernity provided by the canon of modern Jewish thought. Such a turn yields an analytical category we may refer to as the “new secularity” which, when applied to studies in Jewish life in America (and potentially elsewhere) sheds light on communal realities that the secular-religious account misses.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference19 articles.

1. Bauman, Zygmunt (2012). Liquid Modernity, Cambridge University Press.

2. Berger, Peter L. (1967). The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion, Doubleday.

3. Borschel-Dan, Amanda (The Times of Israel, 2014). Girls Fight for the Right to Don Tefillin, The Times of Israel.

4. Diner, Hasia (2006). The Jews of the United States: 1654–2000, University of California Press.

5. van der Meer, Jitse M., and Mandelbrote, Scott (2008). Nature and Scripture in the Abraham Religions: 1700–Present, Brill.

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