

An edition of Jewish choices (1998)
American Jewish denominationalism
By J. Alan Winter,Arnold Dashefsky,Ephram Tabory
Publish Date
1998
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Language
eng
Pages
215
Description:
American Jews have divided their religion into four parts-Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, and no preference Jews. This book focuses on how Jewish lifestyles are expressed through denominational affiliation. The development of American Jewish denominations is viewed as more a matter of individual choice than family heritage. The characteristics of individual adherents of the three major denominations vary systematically as does one's involvement both in local Jewish communities and in the community-at-large. The authors show that as one goes from Orthodox to no preference Jews, the extent of religious expression, ethnic attachments, and Jewish community involvement declines. They project the distribution of denominational preference in 2010 and conclude with recommendations for those who wish to see Jewish identity survive and thrive in America.
subjects: Conservative Judaism, Social conditions, Judaism, Jews, Orthodox Judaism, Reform Judaism, Jewish studies, Religion, Jewish Sociology, United States, Religion - Judaism, USA, Judaism - General, Jewish - General, Judaism - Rituals & Practice, United States - General, Jewish, Jews, united states, social conditions, Jewish way of life
Places: United States