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Home > Catalogue > Between State and Synagogue
Between State and Synagogue

Details

  • 13 b/w illus. 14 tables
  • Page extent: 288 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
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Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9781107003446)

Available, despatch within 3-4 weeks

US $85.00
Singapore price US $90.95 (inclusive of GST)

A thriving, yet small, liberal component in Israeli society has frequently taken issue with the constraints imposed by religious orthodoxy, largely with limited success. However, Guy Ben-Porat suggests, in recent years, in part because of demographic changes and in part because of the influence of an increasingly consumer-oriented society, dramatic changes have occurred in secularization of significant parts of public and private lives. Even though these fissures often have more to do with lifestyle choices and economics than with political or religious ideology, the demands and choices of a secular public and a burgeoning religious presence in the government are becoming ever more difficult to reconcile. The evidence, which the author has accrued from numerous interviews and a detailed survey, is nowhere more telling than in areas that demand religious sanction such as marriage, burial, the sale of pork, and the operation of businesses on the Sabbath.

• Explores the tensions between the liberal component in Israeli society and the constraints imposed by religious orthodoxy • Looks beyond the formal arena of politics to understand the changing role of religion in public life • Important and timely contribution to the study of contemporary Israeli society

Contents

Figures and tables; Preface and acknowledgments; 1. Unpacking secularization; 2. Israel: from status quo to crisis; 3. The state of marriage: regulating and de-regulating love; 4. Burial: a matter of lifestyle; 5. Pig on the plate: from 'white steak' to pork; 6. Live and let buy: bargaining for Sabbath; 7. Conclusions; Bibliography; Index.

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