Preface Zachary I. Heller
Introduction David M. Gordis
Secular Forms of Judaism Paul Mendes-Flohr
Demography and Dimensions of Secularity among American Jews Barry
A. Kosmin
Secularism in the Contemporary Jewish Community David M. Gordis
Let Us Speak of Stories Leonard Fein
A Personal History of Jewish Reading Ilan Stavans
God’s Language and the Making of Secular Jewish Culture David
Biale
Sources of Secularism Mitchell Silver
Secular Jewish Musical Expression—Is Nothing Sacred? Hankus
Netsky
The Secularization of Jewish Cultural Memory:
Epistemological and Hermeneutical Reflections Paul Mendes Flohr
Secular Jewishness in Israel and the Diaspora Yonatan Glaser
Accepting Secular Jewishness and Embracing All Jews Eva
Goldfinger
Contributors
David M. Gordis is president of Hebrew College and professor
emeritus of Rabbinics. He is the founding director of the National
Center for Jewish Policy Studies and the initiator of the
Interreligious Center on Public Life. An ordained rabbi, he is
widely regarded for his classic Jewish scholarship, his communal
leadership, and his extensive writings on Jewish life in America
and Israel. Prior to assuming the presidency of Hebrew College in
1993, he served as vice president of the University of Judaism in
Los Angeles (now renamed the American Jewish University) and as
executive vice president of the American Jewish Committee.
Zachary I. Heller served as associate director of the National
Center for Jewish Policy Studies (successor to the Wilstein
Institute) from 1996 until his death in 2010. He combined a career
in the rabbinate with national and international Jewish communal
leadership. He is the author of numerous articles in the fields of
Jewish policy and bioethics and the editor of several volumes of
Jewish policy studies.
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