Hebrew in America: Perspectives and Prospects

Front Cover
Alan L. Mintz
Wayne State University Press, 1993 - 337 pages

Among the millions of Jews who immigrated to America in the early twentieth century, there were the few for whom Hebrew culture was an important ideal. Reaching a critical

mass around World War I, these American Hebraists attempted to establish a vital Hebrew culture in America. They founded journals and wrote Hebrew poetry, fiction, and

essays, largely about the American Jewish experience, and they succeeded in putting a Hebraist stamp upon most of the Jewish education that took place between the two world wars.

Hebrew in America is the first book to fully explore the Jewish attachment to Hebrew in twentieth-century North America. Fifteen leading scholars in Judaic studies write about

the legacy of American Hebraism and the claims it continues to make upon the soul of the American Jewish community. While they might commonly lament the eclipse of Hebrew in America, they speak with many different voices when it comes to the analysis of problems and the prospects for change.

Several writers look backward to the impact of the Hebrew movement in America on literature and education. Others consider the implications of Hebrew's arrival on the college campus. Another emphasis of the book is the relationship between language and culture in the case of Hebrew from anthropological, educational, and linguistic perspectives. And finally, several essays assess the role of Hebrew in the development of Jewish leadership in America as regards the relationship with the classic past and with contemporary Israel.

 

Contents

Contributors 9 Introduction by Alan Mintz
13
ALAN MINTZ
29
Ameriqa iyut in American Hebrew Literature
68
Hebrew Teachers Colleges and HebrewSpeaking Camps
105
DANIEL J ELAZAR
129
Ideology in Bilingual Education
155
ARNOLD J BAND
172
Language Is Not Enough 187
189
JACOBSON
209
LEWIS H GLINERT
227
RUTH RAPHAELI
251
RUTH R WISSE
265
STEPHEN PHILIP COHEN
296
Afterword
323
Copyright

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About the author (1993)

Alan Mintz is Braun Professor of Modern Hebrew Literature at Brandeis University. He is co-editor of PROOFTEXTS, A journal of Jewish Literary History, and the author of several books including Banished from Their Father’s Table. Professor Mintz earned his Ph.D. from Columbia University.

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