A lively and accessible look at Jewish intermarriage
and its familial and cultural effects.
The American Jewish resistance to intermarriage held
by earlier generations has given way to the view that
intermarriage is normative in the American milieu.
Some observers believe America’s promises are
dramatically fulfilled by marriage across boundaries.
But what is the impact of mixed marriage on Jews and
Judaism? Concerned that intermarriage may weaken American
Jewish vitality, many wonder: Will the blessing of
American openness cause Jewish culture to be virtually
loved out of existence in twenty-first-century America?
Drawing on more than 250 original interviews with
mixed married men and women, Double or Nothing?
examines how couples negotiate the ethnic and religious
identities of their families and the role of external
influences. Fishman’s exploration provides fascinating
insights into the family dynamics of mixed married
households.
Cross-listed in the Brandeis Series in American
Jewish History, Culture and Life
Sylvia Barack Fishman is codirector of the Hadassah-Brandeis
Institute and professor in the Department of Near
Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University,
where she directs the program in contemporary Jewish
life. Her earlier books include Jewish Life and American
Culture and A Breath of Life: Feminism in the American
Jewish Community, named a 1994 Honor Book by the
National Jewish Book Council.
“Sylvia Barack Fishman manages magically, it
seems, to conduct sensitive interviews, absorb complex
data, read a slew of sources, and pull everything
together into a fascinating and challenging whole.
With clarity and compassion, she shows how mixed marriages
have changed the face of American Jewry, and of America
itself.”
–Francine Klagsbrun, author of The Fourth
Commandment: Remember the Sabbath Day
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