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    Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul: A Summer on the Lower East Side

    Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul: A Summer on the Lower East Side

    by Jonathan Boyarin


    eBook

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    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9780823239023
    • Publisher: Fordham University Press
    • Publication date: 11/01/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 226
    • File size: 3 MB

    Jonathan Boyarin is Mann Professor of Modern Jewish Studies at Cornell University. His books include Jewish Families (Rutgers, 2013), Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul: A Lower East Side Summer (Fordham, 2011), and The Unconverted Self: Jews, Indians, and the Identity of Christian Europe (Chicago, 2009).

    Table of Contents

    Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction WEEK One WEEK Two WEEK Three WEEK Four WEEK Five WEEK Six WEEK Seven WEEK Eight WEEK Nine WEEK Ten WEEK Eleven WEEK Twelve Works Cited Glossary Index

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    This story of one of the last remaining synagogues in the historic neighborhood and its congregation is “as absorbing as a good cinema verité documentary” (Booklist).
     
    On New York’s Lower East Side, a narrow building, wedged into a lot designed for an old-law tenement, is full of clamorous voices—the generations of the dead, who somehow contrive to make their presence known, and the newer generation, keeping the building and its memories alive and making themselves Jews in the process. In this book, Jonathan Boyarin, at once a member of the congregation and a bemused anthropologist, follows this congregation of “year-round Jews” through the course of a summer during which its future must once again be decided.
     
    Famous as the jumping off point for millions of Jewish and other immigrants to America, the neighborhood has recently become the hip playground of twentysomething immigrants to the city from elsewhere in America and from abroad. Few imagine that Jewish life there has stubbornly continued through this history of decline and regeneration. Yet, inside with Boyarin, we see the congregation’s life as a combination of quiet heroism, ironic humor, lively disputes, and—above all—the ongoing search for ways to connect with Jewish ancestors while remaining true to oneself in the present.
     
    Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul is both a portrait of a historic neighborhood facing the challenges of gentrification, and a poignant, humorous chronicle of vibrant, imperfect, down-to-earth individuals coming together to make a community.

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    Booklist

    Academic Boyarin goes popular with a journal of the 12 weeks in 2008 that he faithfully attended morning prayers at the 90-plus-year-old synagogue—the shul—of his Modern Orthodox home congregation on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Besides the daily suspense over whether enough men for a minyan will show up, he records the regulars and others who do; their personalities, concerns, relations, and life in the congregation; the congregation’s history, relations with other Orthodox synagogues and institutions, and efforts to keep its historic character and building intact; and the ever-changing face of the neighborhood, now as obviously part of Chinatown as it once was a locus of East European Jewish immigrants. He mentions his dreams, as long as they’re pertinent to the shul, and family events within the context of shul life. The big congregational to-do during the period is over one rabbi’s departure and the search for his successor. As absorbing as a good cinema verité documentary, Boyarin’s personal ethnography may make Lower East Side tourists of many readers hooked by its abundant charm.

    —Times of Israel - Ben Rothke

    This is a fascinating tale of a neighborhood in transition and rejuvenation, and Mornings at the Stanton
    Street Shul: A Summer on the Lower East Side is a most pleasurable read.

    H-Net Reviews - Emily Katz
    'Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul' is inviting, provocative, funny, and stimulating...
    Carolina Arts & Sciences
    [Boyarin] illustrates in poignant and humorous ways the changes taking place in a historic neighborhood facing gentrification.
    From the Publisher
    "A meditation on ethnography, on the nitty-gritty, idiosyncratic, contingent nature of ethnography and the ways that anthropologists are personally implicated in the research and writing that they do."-Ay ala Fader, author of Mitzvah Girls: Bringing Up the Next Generation of Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn

    "Boyarin brilliantly articulates a Jewish ethnographic voice that moves beyond salvage ethnography, providing a richly detailed portrait of an enduring institution and a complex neighborhood through the lens of his own experience."-Nathaniel Deutsch, author of
    The Jewish Dark Continent: Life and Death in the Russian Pale of Settlement

    "This beautiful, new book confirms Jonathan Boyarin's status as one of the most innovative scholars in Jewish Studies. Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul is a field journal and monument to religious endurance. But, first and foremost, it is a celebration of the pleasures of Jewish life."-Matti Bunzl, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

    "In a journal that is always humane, and often humorous, Jonathan Boyarin lovingly details one summer in the life of the Stanton Street Synagogue. Boyarin is the perfect tour guide to take us inside the ever-changing Jewish world on the Lower East Side—a place 'where hip meets hip replacement.'"-Mort Zachter, Author of Dough: A Memoir

    "Turning his impassioned ethnographic eye on the Stanton Street synagogue on New York's Lower East Side, Boyarin finds high drama in this intimate setting. Characteristically adventurous and experimental, Boyarin offers a fascinating account of everyday life as it unfolds in the moment. At the heart of the story is generational conflict in a neighborhood more Chinese and Latino today than jewish, A model of engaged ethnography."-Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Museum of the History of Polish Jews

    "Academic Boyarin goes popular with a journal of the 12 weeks in 2008 that he faithfully attended morning prayers at the 90-plus-year-old synagogue—the shul—of his Modern Orthodox home congregation on Manhattan's Lower East Side. . . As absorbing as a good cinema verité documentary, Boyarin's personal ethnography may make Lower East Side tourists of many readers hooked by its abundant charm."-Booklist

    "[Boyarin] illustrates in poignant and humorous ways the changes taking place in a historic neighborhood facing gentrification."-Carolina Arts & Sciences

    "'Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul' is inviting, provocative, funny, and stimulating..."- Emily Katz, H-Net Reviews

    "This is a fascinating tale of a neighborhood in transition and rejuvenation, and Mornings at the Stanton Street Shul: A Summer on the Lower East Side is a most pleasurable read."—Ben Rothke, Times of Israel

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