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The Divided People: Can Israel's Breakup Be Stopped?

Autor Eva Etzioni-Halevy
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 ian 2002
The Divided People describes a fracturing Israel, a deeply divided state whose political system is buckling and whose society is rapidly polarizing into religious and secular camps. Written by a social scientist and drawing upon social science research, the work documents the emergence of separate social networks, residential areas, symbols, and identities-and even a split in the Hebrew language itself. Yet rather than argue for a return to the commonality of the past, Eva Etzioni-Halevy champions Israel's painful transition toward a truly multicultural society prepared to embrace diversity and democracy. This provocative new book carries a supremely important message for a postmodern Israel taking its first painful steps toward pluralism, liberalism, and tolerance, and a wider lesson for western nations grappling with the problems of a devolutionary age.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780739103258
ISBN-10: 0739103253
Pagini: 185
Dimensiuni: 146 x 226 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction: The Divided People
Chapter 2 A View From the Top
Chapter 3 Who is Special: From Sectors to Communities
Chapter 4 The Secular and the Religious: I'll Do It My Way
Chapter 5 The Separation in Space and Time
Chapter 6 A Tale of Two Cultures
Chapter 7 Still One People? The Split in Jewish Identity
Chapter 8 No Longer Indivisible: Israeli Identity and Zionist Commitment
Chapter 9 Beyond the Rabin Assassination: The Threat to Democracy
Chapter 10 Where Do We Go From Here?
Chapter 11 Conclusion: Give Hope a Chance

Recenzii

Eva Etzioni-Halevy gives a penetrating account of how the no-holds-barred power competition between religious and secular leaders is endangering Israel's democracy. A sweeping but deeply troubling analysis of Israel today and of the funeral pyre its political elites seem intent on building.
Even after concluding that Israeli Jews are increasingly divided on religious grounds, Eva Etzioni-Halevy redirects our attention to the erosion of the common ground that used to (ought to/can still) unite them as a nation and as a democracy.
The Divided People [is] a fascinating dtudy of the variety of differences in worldview and experiences between secular and religious Jews in Israel.
While all commentators on Israeli reality focus on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Eva Etzioni-Halevy points out the crucial significance of the ongoing religious-secular confrontation-which, to no lesser extent, questions the viability of this society. In this masterpiece of sociopolitical analysis, Etzioni-Halevy shows how the essential character of this only sovereign Jewish society is at stake in a battle where divergent camps oppose each other with obstination, willfully ignoring each other's legacy as well as the cultural foundation that holds them together.