חדש על המדף

חדש על המדף

Ambivalent Jew: Charles Liebman in Memoriam
Edited by Stuart Cohen and Bernard Susser לקטלוג
Ambivalent Jew: Charles Liebman in Memoriam
The Ambivalent American Jew established Charles Liebman's reputation as a leading analyst of contemporary Jewry. Its theme boldly foreshadowed Liebman's own struggle to weld together disparate identities. He maintained a lifelong fascination with the Jewish community of the United States, his birthplace, even as he delved ever more deeply into the complexities of his chosen home, the State of Israel. He studied Orthodoxy, but never identified fully with any single religious movement. He trained as a political scientist, but wrote a series of seminal studies in the sociology of the Jews. Charles Liebman had no ambivalence, though, about his core values. Throughout his life he maintained a profound concern for the welfare of the Jewish people and never deviated from his preoccupation with strengthening Jewish life in America and Israel. Nor was his insistence upon achieving the highest standards of scholarly integrity negotiable. He committed himself wholeheartedly to nurturing younger colleagues, acting as a caring critic of their work and establishing small networks of engaged scholars who shared his passionate Jewish concerns.

Stuart Cohen and Bernard Susser are both professors of political studies at Bar-Ilan University, Israel, where they were Liebman's colleagues for over thirty years. Stuart Cohen is also director of the University's Argov Center for the Study of Israel-Diaspora Relations; Bernard Susser holds the University's Senator N.M. Paterson Chair in Politics. Together with Liebman, Susser co-authored Choosing Survival: Strategies for a Jewish Future (Oxford University Press, 1999).