The Jewish South : an American history / Shari Rabin.

Author/creator Rabin, Shari author.
Format Book
PublicationPrinceton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, 2025.
Descriptionxvi, 278 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Subjects

Contents Prologue -- Part I: 1669-1840 -- Chapter 1: Jews, Heathens, and Other Dissenters -- Chapter 2: House of God -- Chapter 3: The Cause of His Country -- Chapter 4: Blessings and Privileges -- Chapter 5: Faith of Our Fathers -- Part II: 1840-1878 -- Chapter 6: Peculiar Institutions -- Chapter 7: Unhappy Contest -- Chapter 8: Infernal Crusade -- Chapter 9: Scattered Nation -- Chapter 10: Holy Cause -- Part III: 1878-1967 -- Chapter 11: Subtle Ostracism -- Chapter 12: The Alien Hebrew -- Chapter 13: No Peace -- Chapter 14: Port and Dock -- Chapter 15: Trembling Tribes -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Index
Abstract A panoramic history of the Jewish American South, from European colonization to today. In 1669, the Carolina colony issued the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, which offered freedom of worship to "Jews, heathens, and other dissenters," ushering in an era that would see Jews settle in cities and towns throughout what would become the Confederate States. The Jewish South tells their stories, and those of their descendants and coreligionists who followed, providing the first narrative history of southern Jews. Drawing on a wealth of original archival findings spanning three centuries, Shari Rabin sheds new light on the complicated decisions that southern Jews made--as individuals, families, and communities--to fit into a society built on Native land and enslaved labor and to maintain forms of Jewish difference, often through religious innovation and adaptation. She paints a richly textured and sometimes troubling portrait of the period, exploring how southern Jews have been targets of antisemitism and violence but also complicit in racial injustice. Rabin considers Jewish immigration and institution building, participation in the Civil War, the 1915 lynching of Leo Frank, and Jewish support for and resistance to the modern fight for Black civil rights. She examines shifting understandings of Jewishness, highlighting both the reality of religious diversity and the ongoing role of Christianity in defining the region. Recovering a neglected facet of the American experience, The Jewish South enables readers to see the South through the eyes of people with a distinctive religious heritage and a southern history older than the United States itself.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN9780691208763 hardcover
ISBN069120876X hardcover
ISBNelectronic book
ISBNelectronic book