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Law and Jewish Difference

Law and Jewish Difference

Law and Jewish Difference

Ambivalent Encounters
Author:
Mareike Riedel, Macquarie University, Sydney
Published:
November 2024
Availability:
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Format:
Adobe eBook Reader
ISBN:
9781009089296

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    After centuries of persecution and discrimination, Jews are today often seen as a successful and well-integrated religious minority group in a 'Judeo-Christian West'. This book qualifies this narrative by exploring the legacy of Christian ambivalence towards Jews in contemporary secular law. By placing disputes over Jewish practices, such as infant male circumcision and the construction of eruvin, within a longer historical context, the book traces how Christian ambivalence towards Jews and Christianity's narrative of supersession became secularised into a cultural repertoire that has shaped central ideas and knowledge underpinning secular law. Christian ambivalence, this book argues, continues to circumscribe not only the rights and equality of Jews but of other non-Christians too. In considering the interaction between law and Christian ambivalence towards Jews, the book engages with broader questions about the cultural foundations of Western secular law, the politics of religious freedom, the racialisation of religion, and the ambivalent nature of legal progress.

    • Describes the enduring influence of the Christian tradition on secular legal reasoning and legal conflict
    • Illuminates how Christian ambivalence towards Jews has influenced central categories of Western secular law
    • Demonstrates how insights from Jewish history can illuminate contemporary legal tensions around the rights of religious minority groups

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘This is a major work in the study of law, race, racism, and Christianity. It demonstrates a sophisticated understanding of the complex relationship between religious difference and processes of racialisation. Developing the concept of ‘ambivalence’, Mareike Riedel presents an invaluable and stimulating study of the encounter between Jewishness and western legalities. This book is an essential read for all those interested in religion, race, and the law.’ Didi Herman, Emerita Professor, University of Kent

    ‘In this erudite and lucid work, Mareike Riedel provides a highly illuminating account of the historical, geopolitical, and theological dynamics of Christian ambivalence toward Jewish identity and religion as reflected in European and Anglophone legal systems. The book provides a sensitive analysis of Jewishness in law across the centuries and into the present; it casts significant light on how this identity has been distinctively constitutive of Christian (and subsequently modern secular) legal subjectivity and carefully delineates the treatment of Jewish identity from the ways in which other religious (notably Muslim) minorities are regarded under a Christian-secular law.’ Margaret Davies, Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor, Flinders University

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    Product details

    November 2024
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009089296
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction: Jewish questions past and present
    • 2. From Jewish other to citizen of the Mosaic Faith
    • 3. Contentious cut: Male circumcision, Christian ambivalence, and children's rights
    • 4. The body of the other: a German controversy over circumcision
    • 5. Dividing lines: the eruv, urban space, and public religiosity
    • 6. When Orthodox Judaism goes public: an eruv dispute in Australia
    • 7. Conclusion: persistent ambivalence.
      Author
    • Mareike Riedel , Macquarie University, Sydney

      Mareike Riedel is a Lecturer at Macquarie Law School in Sydney and a Visiting Fellow at the School of Regulation and Global Governance at the Australian National University. Drawing on her background in both law and the humanities, her research examines the intersections of law, religion, and race and the history of secular law. Before joining Macquarie University, she has held research fellowships at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, at the Australian National University, and at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology.