תקציר
This article asks why middle-class Israeli seculars have recently begun to engage with Jewish religiosity. We use the case of the Jewish New Age (JNA) as an example of the middle class’s turn from a nationalised to a spiritualised version of Judaism. We show, by bringing together the sociology of religion’s interest in emerging spiritualities and cultural sociology’s interest in social class, how after Judaism was deemed socially significant in identity-based struggles for recognition, Israeli New Agers started culturalising and individualising Jewish religiosity by constructing it in a spiritual, eclectic, emotional and experiential manner. We thus propose that what may be seen as cultural and religious pluralism is, in fact, part of a broader system of class reproduction.
שפה מקורית | אנגלית |
---|---|
עמודים (מ-עד) | 575-591 |
מספר עמודים | 17 |
כתב עת | Sociology |
כרך | 51 |
מספר גיליון | 3 |
מזהי עצם דיגיטלי (DOIs) | |
סטטוס פרסום | פורסם - יוני 2017 |
הערה ביבליוגרפית
Publisher Copyright:© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015.
טביעת אצבע
להלן מוצגים תחומי המחקר של הפרסום 'Jewish New Age and the Middle Class: Jewish Identity Politics in Israel under Neoliberalism'. יחד הם יוצרים טביעת אצבע ייחודית.פרסים
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Best Article Award, ISSR (International Society for the Sociology of Religion)
Kaplan, D. (זוכה) & Werczberger, R. (זוכה), 2019
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