Modern Orthodoxy is a form of American Judaism that affirms the traditional tenets and practices of Orthodox Judaism while at the same time maintaining an openness to contemporary cultural and intellectual developments. Beginning in the post-World War II era, Living in Both Worlds shows how a fledgling Modern Orthodoxy carved out an identity separate and apart from unacculturated ultra-Orthodoxy to its right and Conservative Judaism to its left, and follows its development through the first quarter of the twenty-first century as new, divisive issues such as feminism, LGBTQ rights, and the spread of academic biblical scholarship challenged its coherence, and a rejuvenated ultra-Orthodoxy contested its religious legitimacy.
Preface
Introduction
Part One: The Rise of Modern Orthodoxy, 1945–1970
Chapter 1 Pessimistic Prospects
Chapter 2 Renaissance
Chapter 3 What Is Modern Orthodoxy?
Part Two: Challenges and Reorientation, 1970–2000
Chapter 4 Haredization
Chapter 5 The Center Cannot Hold
Chapter 6 Orthodoxy and Feminism
Chapter 7 Resurgence
Part Three: Dilemmas of a New Century, 2001–2025
Chapter 8 Disputes and Divisions
Chapter 9 Modern Orthodoxy Meets Gen Z
Chapter 10 Shifting Perspectives and New Paradigms
Epilogue: Does Modern Orthodoxy Have a Future?
Bibliography
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