Communalist History and Beyond: What Is the Potential of American Jewish History? - American Jewish History

Communalist History and Beyond: What Is the Potential of American Jewish History?

By American Jewish History

  • Release Date: 2009-03-01
  • Genre: Social Science

Description

David Hollinger's rich, thought-provoking essay provides a welcome opportunity to discuss the domain of American Jewish history. Which historical subjects fall within the field's boundaries? Or, instead of defining parameters, should those who traditionally define themselves as American Jewish historians adopt a more open-ended approach that would include as historical subjects anyone of Jewish background or origins regardless of whether they affiliated with Jewish organizations, participated in Jewish causes, or took an interest in things Jewish? Specialists in American Jewish history have rarely engaged such questions, at least not in print. (1) Hollinger's essay thus invites us to consider the conceptual underpinnings of American Jewish history and possible directions for the field. Hollinger describes the dominant approach to American Jewish history as "communalist," by which he means, "an emphasis on the history of communal Jewry, including the organizations and institutions that proclaim Jewishness, and the activities of individuals who identify themselves as Jewish and/or are so identified by non-Jews with the implication it somehow matters." For historians working in a communalist mode, the concept of "the Jewish people" frames their research. They tend to focus more on the internal world of Jews than on their involvement in wider realms of American society, culture, and politics. In part, this reflects academic training, but one may identify a personal dimension, as well. The overwhelming majority of American Jewish historians are themselves Jews who were raised within one segment or another of the organized Jewish community, including, notably, Zionist organizations of a liberal-left political persuasion. (2) (By contrast, few, if any, red-diaper babies have gone into American Jewish history as a full-time, professional pursuit, though many have played leading roles in the fields of labor history, women's history, and African American history.) This is not to suggest too close a relationship between familial upbringing and historiographic viewpoint. American Jewish scholarship in recent decades has not, in the main, reflected Zionist ideologies, in keeping with the overall shift away from nationalist perspectives in modern Jewish historiography. (3) The field's scholarly thrust has been toward demonstrating the vibrancy and viability of the American Jewish community against critics, Zionists among them, who have predicted the gradual disappearance of Jews into American society. (4) Even so, formative influences and organizational affiliations help to explain the overall predisposition among American Jewish historians toward a communalist outlook.

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