d) Judaism, men, and masculinities

Bauman, J. M. (2006). Manly Menschen: Jewish masculinities in Germany after the Holocaust. KSU masters theses (Dept. of History). Thesis (M.A.)—KentStateUniversity.

Benor, S. (2004). Talmid Chachams and Tsedeykeses: Language, Learnedness, and Masculinity among Orthodox Jews. Jewish Social Studies, 11(1), 147–170.

Benor, S. B. (2004). Talmid Chachams and Tsedeykeses: Language, Learnedness, and Masculinity Among Orthodox Jews. Jewish Social Studies 11(1): 147.

Berger, Maurice. (1996). The mouse that never roars: Jewish masculinity on American television. In Kleeblatt, N. L. (Ed.). Too Jewish?: challenging traditional identities. New York: Jewish Museum.

Bergoffen, W. H. (2007). Guardians, Millionaires, and Fearless Fighters: Transforming Jewish Gangsters into a Usable Past. Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, 25(3), 91–110.

Biberman, M. (2004). Masculinity, anti–semitism, and early modern English literature: from the satanic to the effeminate Jew. Aldershot, Hampshire, England; Burlington, VT, USA: Ashgate Pub. Contents: Contents: His stones, his daughter, and his ducats: the Jew–devil, the Jew–sissy and the theo–sexual matrix —Madam rabbi: representations of Jewish women in English Renaissance drama —By thee adulterous lust was driv’n from men: Donne, Milton and the rise of the Jew–sissy —She proving false, the next I took to wife: divorce law and violence in Jonson, Cary and Milton —He is imitating nobody, and he is inimitable: T.S. Eliot and the antisemitic aesthetics of the Milton controversy —When King Laugh come he make them all dance: the Gothic reconstitution of the Jew–devil.

Bilu, Y. (2003). From milah (circumcision) to milah (word): male identity and rituals of childhood in the Jewish ultraorthodox community. Ethos, 31(2), 172–203.

Boyarin, Daniel (2002). What does a Jew want? Or, the political meaning of the phallus. In Adams, R., & Savran, D. (Eds.). The masculinity studies reader. Keyworks in cultural studies, 5. Malden, Mass: Blackwell.

Boyarin, Daniel. (1997). Unheroic conduct: the rise of heterosexuality and the invention of the Jewish man. Contraver- sions, 8. Berkeley: University of California Press. Contents: Introduction — Part I: Men Who Roam with the SheepDiaspora and the Image of the Jewish Man —I. Goyim NachesOr, the Mentsh and the Jewish Cri- tique of Romance —II. Jewish MasochismOn Penises and Politics, Power and Pain —III.Rabbis and Their PalsRabbinic Homosociality and the Lives of Women —IV.Femminization and Its DiscontentsTorah Study as a System for the Domination of Women. Part Ii: The Rise of Heterosexuality and the Invention of the Modern Jew —V.Freud’s Baby, Fliess’s MaybeOr, Male Hysteria, Homophobia, and the Invention of the Jew- ish Man —VI.”You May Not Tell the Boys” The Diaspora Politics of a Bitextual Jew — VII. The Colonial DragZionism, Gender, and Mimicry —VIIIRetelling the Story of O. Or, Bertha Pappenheim, My Hero.

Brenner, A., & Dijk Hemmes, F. v. (1993). On gendering texts: female and male voices in the Hebrew Bible. Biblical interpretation series, vol. 1. Leiden: Brill.

Brenner, M., & Reuveni, G. (Eds.) (2006). Emancipation through muscles: Jews and sports in Europe.Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Brod, Harry, and Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit. (eds.) (2010). Brother Keepers: New Perspectives on Jewish Masculinity. Men’s Studies Press.
Introduction: Why Now? – Harry Brod
I. The Boy Is Father to the Man 1. “Everything that Makes Us Human”: Identity, Bonding and Resilience among Jewish Boys – Michael Reichert and Sharon Ravitch 2. Circumcision and Masculinity: Motherly Men or Brutal Patriarchs? – Eric Silverman 3. Not-So-Nice Jewish Boys: Notes on Violence and the Construction of Jewish-American Masculinity in the Late 20th and Early 21st Centuries – Jackson Katz
II. Toward Embodiment: Wrestling with the Angel 4. Virility and Impotence: From Traditional Society to the Haskalah – Israel Bartal 5. The Zionist Body: Nationalism and Sexuality in Herzl’s Altneuland – Michael Gluzman 6. National Troubles: Male Matters in Israeli Gay Cinema – Raz Yosef 7. “Restrain Your Impulse” Versus “Break the Boundaries”: From Whence Shall My Sexual Guidance Come? – Lawrence Bush 8. Prosthethic Voice – Oreet Ashery and Barnaby Adams
III. Emasculation and its Discontents 9. Trouble on Max Nordau Street: Michael Chabon Rewrites Jewish Masculinity – Warren Rosenberg 10. The New Queer Jew: Jewishness, Masculinity and Contemporary Film – Michele Aaron 11. Mendoza Forever – Sylvia Paskin
IV. Hearts and Souls 12. The Odyssey (of a Jewish Man) – Rabbi Mordechai Liebling 13. Telling Our Stories: Liberation Work for Jewish Men – Billy Yalowitz 14. Why Men Gather: The Jewish Men’s Retreat Journey – Allen Spivack and Yosaif August 15. Men and Dreams: Embracing Esau – Rabbi Rami Shapiro 16. Finding the Light – Kiddush Levanah: A Ritual of Renewal for Jewish Men – Rabbi Kerry M. Olitzky 17. When the Stories Stop ... – Doug Barden 18. Poems for the Post-Modern Man – Rabbi Ed Stafman, Rabbi Jacob J. Staub, and Simcha Paull Raphael
Afterword: A Midrash – Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit
Contributors / Sample Listing of Jewish Men’s Resources / Index.

Brod, Harry. (1995). Of mice and supermen: Images of Jewish masculinity. In Rudavsky, T. (Ed.). Gender and Judaism: the transformation of tradition. New York: New York University Press, pp. 279–294.

Brod, Harry. (1996). Of mice and supermen: Images of Jewish masculinity. In Boyd, S. B., Longwood, W. M., & Muesse, M. W. (Eds.). Redeeming men: religion and masculinities. Louisville, Ky: Westminster John Knox Press, pp. 145–170.

Brod, Harry. (2003). Jewish men. In Kimmel, Michael & Amy Aronson (Eds.), Men and Masculinities: A social, cultural, and historical encyclopedia.Santa Barbara, CA: ABC–Clio Press, pp. 441–443.

Brod, Harry. (Ed.) (1988). A Mensch among men: explorations in Jewish masculinity. Freedom, CA: Crossing Press. Contents: I. Real men don’t eat Kosher: on Jewish male identities —Coats and tales: Joseph stories & myths of Jewish masculinity / Lori Lefkovits — To be or not to be Larry Bush / Larry Bush —What do men want, Dr. Roth? / Barbara Gottfried —A young Rabbi / Joshua J. Hammerman —II. Fathers & sons: from gen- eration to generation —The Jewish father: past and present / Chaim I. Waxman —Learning Talmud from dad, though dad knew no Talmud / Gary Greenebaum —Growing up Jewish & male / Max Rivers —How to deal with a Jewish issue: circumcision / Zalman Schachter–Shalomi —The real Jewish father / Michael Gold —The impotent father: Roth and Peretz / Robert P. Waxler —Mayn yingle (my little one) / Morris Rosenfeld, translated by Doug Lipman —III. Anti–Semitism, & heterosexism: coming out of the shadows — Lifting up the shadow of anti–Semitism: Jewish masculinity in a new light / Barbara Breitman —The sexual mythology of anti–Semitism / Andrea Dworkin —The Jewish view of homosexuality / Barry Dov Schwartz —Reclaiming Jewish history: homo–erotic poetry of the Middle Ages / Helen Leneman —IV. Men of the world: men’s movements and social activism —Judaism, masculinity, & feminism / Michael Kimmel —A Jew- ish men’s movement / Robert Rosenberg —The gay movement is no place for Jew–hating / The Staff of Gay Community News —Jewish men & violence in the home – unlikely companions? / Bob Gluck — Adorning the mystery: a vision of social activism / Arthur Waskow —Toward a male Jewish feminism / Harry Brod.

Buchwald, I. N. N. (2004). Anxious embodiments: Revenants of post–WWII American Jewish masculinities in Barnett Newman’s “Stations of the Cross”. Unpublished Ph.D., The University of Chicago, United States—Illinois.

Carroll, B. E. (Ed.) (2003). American masculinities: a historical encyclopedia. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications. Entries include: Jewish manhood, pp. 248–52.

Chrol, E. Del. (2006). Countercultural responses to the crisis of masculinity in late republican Rome. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Southern California.

Clines, David J. A. (1995). Interested Parties: The Ideology of Writers and Readers of the Hebrew Bible. Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series, 205[Gender, Culture, Theory, 1], 212–241.

Clines, David J. A. (2002). He–Prophets: Masculinity as a Problem for the Hebrew Prophets and Their Interpreters. In Robert P. Carroll, Alastair G. Hunter & Philip R. Davies (Eds.), Sense and Sensitivity: essays on reading the Bible in memory of Robert Carroll.London: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 311–328. = Journal for the study of the Old Testament, Supplement series. no. 348.

Dana, R. (2006). The Jew Bill Of 1753: Masculinity, Virility, And The Nation. Eighteenth - Century Studies, 39(2): 157.

David–Herzog–Centrum für Jüdische Studien. (Ed.) (2001).Judentum und Männlichkeit. Graz: transversal: Zeitschrift des David–Herzog–Centrums für Jüdische Studien, 1/2001. Includes: Proust’s Nose / Sander L. Gilman— Das Bild vom “Juden” in den Texten Max Nordaus / Ingrid Spörk — The German–Jewish Hyphen: Conjunct, Disjunct or Adjunct? / Harry Brod — Männlichkeit und Militär in Israel / Uta Klein.

Dekel, M. (2005). Masculinity, modernity and the making of a Jewish national subject. Unpublished Ph.D., Columbia University, United States— New York.

Eilberg–Schwartz, Howard (1996). The Father, the Phallus, the Seminal Word: Dilemmas of Patrilineality in Ancient Judaism. In Maynes, M. J. (Ed.). Gender, kinship, power: a comparative and interdisciplinary history. New York, N.Y.: Routledge.

Eilberg–Schwartz, Howard. (1994). God’s Phallus and other problems for men and monotheism. Boston: Beacon Press. [O falo de Deus e outros problemas para os homens e o monoteísmo. Rio de Janeiro: Imago, 1995].

Flood, Michael; Judith Kegan Gardiner, Bob Pease, & Keith Pringle (Eds.) (2007). International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities. Routledge [entries include: “Jewish Masculinities”]

Freedman, Johnathan (2005). Miller, Monroe, and the remaking of Jewish masculinity. In Brater, E. (Ed.). Arthur Miller’s America theater & culture in a time of change. Theater–theory/text/performance. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. 135–152.

Geller, Jay. (200X). The Queerest Cut of All: Freud, Beschneidung, Homosexualität und maskulines Judentum. In Ulrike Brunotte & Rainer Herrns (Eds.), Produktion und Krise hegemonialer Männlichkeit in der Moderne . Bielefeld: transcript Verlag. Forthcoming.

Gillerman, S. (2003). Samson in Vienna: The Theatrics of Jewish Masculinity. Jewish Social Studies, 9(2), 65–98.

Gilman, Sander L. (1999). Zeugenschaft und jüdische Männlichkeit. Der Zusammenhang von Zeugenschaft und jüdischer ‘Männlichkeit’ im Prozeß bei Franz Kafka und Arnold Zweig. In Zeugnis und Zeugenschaft. Akademie–Verlag: Berlin, 2000 (Jahrbuch des Einstein Forums, 1999), pp. 157–177.

Glancy, J. A. (1996). The Mistress of the Gaze: Masculinity, Slavery, and Representation. Semeia, 74, 127–145. Goldsmith, M. (2005). The Year of the Rose: Jewish Masculinity in The House of Mirth. MFS Modern Fiction Studies, 51(2), 374–392.

Hamburger Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Juden, Vol. 27. Gottingen: Wallstein Verlag.

Hertz, Deborah. (2005). Männlichkeit und Melancholie in Berlin der Biedermeierzeit. In Heinsohn, K., & Schuler–Springorum, S. (2006). Deutsch–jüdische Geschichte als Geschlechtergeschichte: Studien zum 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. Hamburger Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Juden, Vol. 28. Gottingen: Wallstein.

Hertz, Deborah. (2006). Dueling for Emancipation: Jewish Masculinity in the Era of Napoleon. In Richarz, M., Kaplan, M. A., & Meyer, B. (2005). Jüdische Welten: Juden in Deutschland vom 18. Jahrhundert bis in die Gegenwart.

Hödl, Klaus. (2005). Masculinity. In Richard S. Levy (Ed.), Antisemitism: A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and

Holzman, M. (Ed.) (forthcoming). The still small voice: reflections on being a Jewish man. New York, N.Y.: URJ Press.

Kahl, Brigitte (2000). No Longer Male: Masculinity Struggles Behind Galatians 3.28? Journal for the Study of the New Testament, 23, 37–49.

Kaye, J. (2006). The “Whine”of Jewish Manhood: Re–Reading Hemingway’s Anti–Semitism, Reimagining Robert Cohn. Hemingway Review, 25(2), 44–60.

Kimmel, Michael S. (1992). Judaism, Masculinity, and Feminism. In Kimmel, Michael and Messner, Michael. (eds.). Men’s Lives. New York/Toronto: Macmillan/Maxwell (2nd edition).

King–Tornberg, S. D. (2006). Feminine acts in a male world: God’s tears and man’s tears in rabbinic discourse. Thesis (Rabbinic) —Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion, BrookdaleCenter.

Kunin, J. (2003). Masculinity in Jewish–American literature, 1867–1950: a study of selected writing from the end of the Civil War to the beginning of the Cold War. Thesis (Ph. D.)—YorkUniversity.

Lefkovitz, Lori Hope (2002). Passing as a Man: Narratives of Jewish Gender Performance. Narrative, 10(1), 91–103.

Martel, E. (2001). From Mensch to Macho? The Social Construction of a Jewish Masculinity. Men and Masculinities, 3(4), 347–369.

Martel, Elise. (2001). From Mensch to Macho? The Social Construction of a Jewish Masculinity. Men and Masculinities, 3(4), April.

Mayer, Tamar (2005). From zero to hero: masculinity in Jewish nationalism. In Fuchs, E. (Ed.). Israeli women’s studies: a reader. New Brunswick, N.J.: RutgersUniversity Press.

McCune, Mary (1998). Social Workers in the Muskeljudentum: “Hadassah Ladies,” “Manly Men” and the Significance of Gender in the American Zionist Movement, 1912–1928. American Jewish History, 86(2), 135–165

Millen, R. L. (2000). Judaism Since Gender: A Review Essay. Modern Judaism, 20(1), 103–112.

Mirrer, Louise (1994). Representing “other”men: Muslims, Jews, and masculine ideals in medieval Castilian epic and ballad. In Lees, C. A., Fenster, T. S., & McNamara, J. A. (Eds.),Medieval masculinities: regarding men in the Middle Ages. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Moore, Stephen D., & Janice Capel Anderson (1998). Taking It like a Man: Masculinity in 4 Maccabees. Journal of Biblical Literature, 117(2), 249–273.

Peleg, Y. (2007). Heroic Conduct: Homoeroticism and the Creation of Modern, Jewish Masculinities. Jewish Social Studies, 13(1), 31–58.

Persecution. Santa Barbara, California: ABC–CLIO, pp. 447–8.

Peskowitz, Miriam and Levitt, Laura. (eds.). (1997). Judaism Since Gender. Routledge.

Presner, Todd Samuel (2003). ‘Clear Heads, Solid Stomachs, and Hard Muscles’: Max Nordau and the Aesthetics of Jewish Regeneration. Modernism/Modernity, 10(2), 269–296.

Presner, Todd Samuel (2007). Muscular Judaism: the Jewish body and the politics of regeneration. Routledge Jewish studies series. London: Routledge. Contents: Introduction / 1. The Origins of Muscular Judaism / 2. The Rhet- oric of Regeneration: “Clear Heads, Solid Stomachs, and Hard Muscles” / 3. The Aesthetics of Regeneration: Martin Buber, E.M. Lilien, and the Aesthetic State / 4. The Gymnastics of Regeneration: The Anatomo–Politics of the Jewish Body / 5. The Land of Regeneration: Seafaring Jews and the Zionist Colonial Imaginary / 6. Soldiers of Regeneration: The Military Might of Old–New Maccabees and the Great War / Concluding Remarks. [Presner, T. S. (2003). The aesthetics of regeneration: the Zionist invention of the muscle Jew and the visual culture of the fin–de–siècle. Thesis (Ph. D. in History of Art)—University of California, Berkeley]

Rabin, D. Y. (2006). The Jew Bill of 1753: Masculinity, Virility, and the Nation. Eighteenth–Century Studies. 39(2), 157–171.

Reichert, M. C., & Ravitch, S. M. (2010). Defying normative male identities: The transgressive possibilities of Jewish boyhood. Youth & Society, 42(1), 104-130.

Reizbaum, Marilyn (2004). Max Nordau and the generation of Jewish muscle. In Cheyette, B., & Valman, N. (Eds.). The image of the Jew in European liberal culture, 1789–1914. Parkes–Wiener series on Jewish studies. London: Vallentine Mitchell.

Resnick, Irven M. (2000). Medieval Roots of the Myth of Jewish Male Menses. Harvard Theological Review 93, 241–263.

Rosenberg, Warren. (2001). Legacy of Rage: Jewish Masculinity, Violence, and Culture. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
1. Bugsy and Me: Jewish Men and Violence.
2. ‘Devoted to Destruction’: God and Violence in the Hebrew Scriptures.
3. ‘A Heritage of Rage’: Golems and Gimpels in Jewish Literature of the Early Twentieth Century.
4. White Negroes and Protestant Jews: Norman Mailer’s Hybrid Heroes and Jewish Male Violence.
5. Mailer’s Brothers: The ‘Counterlife’ of Violence in Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, and Philip Roth.
6. Jewish Men with Guns: Remasculinization in Contemporary Jewish American Literature and Film.
7. Beyond Mailer: Imagining an End to Violence in Cynthia Ozick and Tony Kushner.
Epilogue: Saving Private Ryan.

Rossen, Rebecca (2006). The Jewish man and his dancing shtick: stock characterization and Jewish masculinity in postmodern dance. In Brook, V. (Ed.). You should see yourself: Jewish identity in postmodern American culture. New Brunswick, N.J.: RutgersUniversity Press.

Salkin, Jeffrey K. (1999). Searching For My Brothers: Jewish Men in a Gentile World. Putnam Pub Group.

Satlow, Michael L. (1996). “Try to Be a Man”: The Rabbinic Construction of Masculinity. The Harvard Theological Review,89(1), 19–40.

Saxe, J. (2005). Torah Testoterone and tears: masculinity and emotion in the Bible. Thesis (RAB)—Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion, BrookdaleCenter.

Shor, E. (2008). Contested Masculinities: The New Jew and the Construction of Black and Palestinian Athletes in Israeli Media. Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 32(3): 255-277.

Sigal, P. (1976). Elements of Male Chauvinism in Classical Halakhah. Judaism, 24, 226–44.

Tinklenberg deVega, J. L., & Levenson, D. B. (2006). “A man who fears God”constructions of masculinity in Hellenistic Jewish intepretations of the story of Joseph. Thesis (Ph. D.)—FloridaStateUniversity.

Valman, N. (1996). Muscular Jews: young England, gender and Jewishness in Disraeli’s “political trilogy”. Jewish History,10, 57–88.

Valman, N. (2003). “Barbarous and medieval”: Jewish marriage in fin de siècle English fiction. Jewish Culture and History,6, 111–129.

Voeltz, Richard A. (1988). ‘... A Good Jew and a Good Englishman’: The Jewish Lads’ Brigade, 1894–1922. Jour-nal of Contemporary History, 23(1), 119–127.

Wasserfall, Rahel R. (1994). Continuity and Struggle: Two Generations of Jewish Moroccan Men in a Moshav in Israel. Journal of Mediterranean Studies, 4(2), pp. 300-312.

Wolfson, Elliot R. (1997). Eunuchs who keep the Sabbath: becoming male and the ascetic ideal in the thirteenth–century Jewish mysticism. In Cohen, J. J., & Wheeler, B. (Eds.).Becoming male in the Middle Ages. New York: Garland Pub.