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Arts & Culture | Books

The Social-Justice Camera

06/12/2012 | George Robinson | Special to the Jewish Week | Books
Bernard Cole’s “Shoemaker’s Lunch,” from 1944, is part of documentary on the Photo League.

The concept of “tikkun olam” — repairing the world — is a central tenet of Judaism. It is also, not infrequently, an excuse for critics like your humble servant to shoehorn texts and art that are not obviously Jewish into the pages of a Jewish newspaper. But there are times when the connection between Jewish identity, social justice work and the arts is so palpable that to ignore it would be more foolish than to proclaim it.

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Strange Fruit

06/05/2012 | Eric Herschthal | Staff Writer | Books
Cohen tells a classic rags-to-riches story in the tale of Samuel Zemurray.

The author Rich Cohen first heard about Samuel Zemurray in the late-1980s. Cohen was sitting in a sophomore class on American Jewish fiction at Tulane, and the professor gave a lecture about Zemurray, the longtime president of the United Fruit Company, and, in the early 20th century, one of the richest men in America.

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The ‘Middle’ Movement Affirms, Updates Its Middle Path

05/08/2012 | Diane Cole | Special To The Jewish Week | Books
Conservative movement’s new guide to Jewish life reflects societal changes.

What does it mean to be an observant Jew in the 21st century? The question sounds deceptively simple, but the answer takes more than 30 rabbis and nearly 1,000 pages in the massive volume being published later this month by the Rabbinical Assembly of Judaism’s Conservative movement, “The Observant Life: The Wisdom of Conservative Judaism for Contemporary Jews.” That’s nearly twice the length of the book it updates, Rabbi Isaac Klein’s 1979 “A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice.” Has the world — or Judaism — changed that much in the 33 years in between the appearance of those books?

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Writing Between Worlds

05/01/2012 | Sandee Brawarsky | Jewish Week Book Critic | Books
Kashua’s third novel underlines the complexities of life in Israel for minorities.

When I ask Sayed Kashua about the roots of his humor, he says that he isn’t sure, but that it probably has something to do with his discovery, as an Israeli Arab attending a Jewish high school, that humor could protect him.

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From Here To Absurdity

04/17/2012 | Eric Herschthal | Staff Writer | Books
Kasher in the Rye book cover.

Many of the best comedians have had deeply troubled pasts. But Moshe Kasher, a rising 32-year-old comic and author of a new memoir, “Kasher in the Rye,” takes the old adage to a new level.

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The (Piano) Keys To Her Survival

04/10/2012 | Sandee Brawarsky | Jewish Week Book Critic | Books
New and recently translated books depict women's experiences before and during the Holocaust.

At 108, Alice Herz-Sommer is believed to be the oldest living Holocaust survivor. Born in Prague, she watched her mother being deported to Terezin in 1942, and never saw her again. A year later, she was also deported there with her husband and son. By then, Herz-Sommer was an acclaimed pianist, and continued to play in the concentration camp, giving more than a hundred concerts to fellow prisoners and to the Nazis. Her husband was killed in the camp just before liberation.

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