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Judaism Reading List: Reconstructionist Judaism (Pt. VI)





Archive-name: judaism/reading-lists/reconstructionist
Soc-culture-jewish-archive-name: reading.reconstructionist
Posting-Frequency: Monthly

              Selected Sources for Additional Reading on Judaism
                      Part VI: Reconstructionist Judaism
         [Last Change: $Date: 1995/10/19 15:21:35 $ $Revision: 1.3 $]
                    [Last Post: Fri Oct 17 11:07:10 US/Pacific 2003]

   This message is intended to provide readers of soc.culture.jewish with
   a list of references to allow them to learn more about the current
   practices, past practices, beliefs, and history of the
   Reconstructionist Judaism Movement.
   
   Reconstructionist Judaism is the small "fourth movement" of American
   Judaism. It was founded by the Conservative Rabbi and philosopher
   Mordecai Kaplan. It emphasizes "Judaism as a civilization" (i.e., the
   integration of selected Jewish beliefs with the Jewish people's
   culture and folkways).
   
   Reconstructionist Jews are willing to question conventional answers
   and keep open minds. They believe that a Jew need not and ought not
   sacrifice intellectual integrity for the sake of his/her Jewish
   identity. Reconstructionists are Jews who take the Jewish traditions
   seriously and live Jewish lives even through they don't believe in the
   divine supernatural origin of the Torah. Reconstructionists believe
   that, just a Jewish civilization has adapted to new circumstances
   throughout Jewish history, so must it adapt to late twentieth-century
   North American society. Reconstructionists tend to conduct more
   intimate worship services in which everyone is involved and the
   rabbi--if there is one--does not dominate.
   
   The membership body of the Reconstructionist Movement is the [6]Jewish
   Reconstructionist Federation ([7]http://www.jrf.org/). The association
   of the reconstructionist Rabbis is the Reconstructionist Rabbinical
   Association. The Reconstructionist Rabbinical College publishes
   Raayonot as its rabbinical journal.
   
    Where Can I Get The Books
    
     * Many of these books are available through general bookstores or
       Judaica bookstores. A list of links to these may be found in the
       [8]sources section of the [9]General Reading List (if you are
       reading this at [10]www.scjfaq.org, you can simply click on the
       "Sources" button in the header navigation bar).
     * Publications of the Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation, the
       Reconstructionist Press, etc. may be obtained from:
       
    Jewish Reconstructionist Federation
    Beit Devora
    7804 Montgomery Avenue, Suite 9
    Elkins Park, PA 19027-2649
    Phone (215) 782-8500
    Fax (215) 782-8805
    E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    Reconstructionist Press toll free order line: (877) JRF-PUBS or
    (877) 573-7827
    [12]http://www.jrf.org/pub/cat-main.html
       
   [Amazon Associate] The S.C.J Reading List has established an affiliate
   relationship with Amazon.Com. ([13]http://www.amazon.com/). Now you
   can complete your Reconstructionist Jewish library and support the
   continued development of the Reading Lists at the same time, for many
   books on Reconstructionist Judaism are available through Amazon. For
   those reading this at [14]www.scjfaq.org/rl/jrc-intro.html, you can
   click the link to the left to browse Amazon's selections.
   Alternatively, if you enter Amazon using the URL
   [15]http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect-home?tag=socculturejewi
   sh, the reading lists will get credit for your entry. Additionally,
   when you see the Amazon graphic [16][If you were at www.scjfaq.org,
   the graphic would be here] (or "[Buy at Amazon: http:...]") on an
   entry in the reading list, this indicates that the specific book is
   available for purchase at Amazon. Click on the graphic/link to go to
   Amazon and purchase the book.

   Reproduction of this posting for commercial use is subject to
   restriction. See Part 1 (general) for more details.

------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: ORGANIZATION

   This reading list is organized as follows:
     * [8]Introduction to this Reading List 
     * [9]Philosophy Of Movement 
     * [10]Reconstructionist Education 
     * [11]Reconstructionist Liturgy 
     * [12]Credits

------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Philosophy of Movement

   [Alp85]
          Alpert, Rebecca T. and Staub, Jacob J. Exploring Judaism: A
          Reconstructionist Approach Reconstructionist Press, New York.
          1985. ISBN 0-935457-00-3.
          
   [Coh58]
          Cohen, Jack J. The Case for Religious Naturalism.
          Reconstructionist Press, New York. 1958.
          
   [Eis52]
          Eisenstein, Ira and Kohn, Eugene. Mordecai M. Kaplan: An
          Evaluation Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation, New York. 1952.
          Out of Print.
          
   [Gol91]
          Goldsmith, Emanuel S.; Scult, Mel; Seltzer, Robert M. The
          American Judaism of Mordecai M. Kaplan. New York Univ Pr; 1991.
          Paperback. ISBN 0-814730-52-3. [6][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814730523/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [Kap34]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M. Judaism as a Civilization.
          Reconstructionist Press, New York. 1934. Jewish Publication
          Society; 1994. Paperback. 640 pages. ISBN 0-827605-29-3. [One
          of the most original contributions toward creating a
          comprehensive program for creative Jewish life. Kaplan here
          offers his now famous concept of Judaism as an evolving
          religious civilization. For Judaism to survive and grow, Jews
          must continue to reconstruct their heritage in response to
          changes in social, political, and cultural conditions.]
          [7][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0827605293/socculturejew
          ish] 
          
   [Kap36]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M., Ed. The Jewish Reconstructionist Papers.
          Behrman's Jewish Book House, New York. 1936. Out of Print.
          
   [Kap48]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M. The Future of the American Jew.
          Reconstructionist Press, New York. 1948. Out of Print.
          
   [Kap56]
          Kaplan, Moredecai M. Questions Jews Ask: Reconstructionist
          Answers. Reconstructionist Press, New York. 1956. Out of Print.
          
   [Kap60]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M. The Greater Judaism in the Making
          Reconstructionist Press, New York. 1960. Out of Print.
          
   [Kap91]
          Kaplan, Mordecai;Goldsmith, Emanuel S. (ed); Scult, Mel (ed).
          Dynamic Judaism: The Essential Writings of Mordecai M. Kaplan.
          Fordham Univ Pr; 1991. Paperback reprint edition. ISBN
          0-823213-10-2.
          [8][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0823213102/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [Kap94]
          Kaplan, Mordecai, M. The Meaning of God in Modern Jewish
          Religion. Wayne State Univ Pr; 1994. Paperback reprint. ISBN
          0-814325-52-1. [Kaplan's most easily understood theological
          work. It is organized around the Jewish holidays but actually
          is an elaboration of the basic concepts of his theological
          system. This edition includes a new introduction, in which
          Kaplan's thought is put in a historical perspective.]
          [9][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814325521/socculturejew
          ish] 
          
   [Neu93]
          Neusner, Jacob (ed). Conserving Conservative Judaism:
          Reconstructionist Judaism (Judaism in Cold War America,
          1945-1990, Vol. 7). Garland Pub; 1993. Hardcover. ISBN
          0-815300-78-6.
          [10][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0815300786/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [Pre89]
          Prell, Riv-Ellen. Prayer and Community: The Havurah in American
          Judaism. Wayne State Univ Pr; 1989. Paperback. ISBN:
          0-814319-35-1. [Reconstructionist]
          [11][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814319351/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [Scu93]
          Scult, Mel. Judaism Faces the Twentieth Century: A Biography of
          Mordecai M. Kaplan (American Jewish Civilization Series). Wayne
          State Univ Pr; 1994. Paperback. ISBN 0-814322-80-8.
          [12][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814322808/socculturejew
          ish/] 

------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Reconstructionist Education

   [Sta85]
          Staug, Jacob and Schein, Jeffrey eds. Creative Jewish
          Education: A Reconstructionist Perspective. Rossel Books and
          Reconstructionist Rabbinic Council Press, New York. 1985. Out
          of Print.

------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Reconstructionist Liturgy

   [JRF91]
          Teutsch, David A. (ed). Kol Haneshamah: Shirim Uvrahot: Songs
          and Blessings. The Reconstructionist Press, 1991. Jewish
          Reconstructionist Federation; 2000. Hardcover. ISBN
          0-935457-44-5. [Songs, Blessing and Rituals For the Home --
          includes music; also available is an audio tape to accompany
          the book.]
          [6][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0935457445/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [JRF94]
          Teutsch, David A. (ed). Kol Haneshamah: Shabbat Vehagim. The
          Reconstructionist Press, 1994. Jewish Reconstructionist
          Federation; 1996. Hardcover. 3rd ed. ISBN 0-935457-46-1.
          [Sabbath and Holidays Prayerbook; includes a revised version of
          the Erev Shabbat book]
          [7][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0935457461/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [JRF96]
          Teutsch, David A. (ed). Kol Haneshamah: Limot Hol (Daily Prayer
          Book). The Reconstructionist Press, Wyncote, Pennsylvania,
          1996. pages Jewish Reconstructionist Federation; 2000. Reprint
          edition. ISBN 0-935457-47-X. [Contains readings for use in a
          house of mourning and throughout the year]
          [8][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/093545747X/socculturejew
          ish] 
          
   [FRC93]
          Federation of Reconstructionist Congregations and Havurot. Kol
          Haneshamah: Nashir Uneverah. Enlarged Second Edition. The
          Reconstructionist Press, Wyncote PA, 1993. [Songs and Grace
          After Meals -- words, but not music]
          
   [Kap99]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M. (ed); Kohn, Eugene (ed); Eisenstein, Ira;
          Gerirtz, Gila (ed). Hagadah Shel Pesah: The New American
          Haggadah Behrman House; 1999. Paperback. Revised edition. ISBN
          0-874416-75-2.
          [9][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0874416752/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [JRF00]
          Teutsch, David (ed); Rosenberg, Joel (trans). Kol Haneshamah:
          Mahzor Leyamim Nora'Im. Jewish Reconstructionist Federation;
          2000. Hardcover. ISBN 0-935457-48-8.
          [10][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0935457488/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [JRF41]
          Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation. The New Haggadah. Jewish
          Reconstructionist Foundation, New York. 1941. Out of Print.
          [Passover Liturgy]
          
   [JRF45]
          Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation. The Sabbath Prayer Book.
          Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation, New York. 1945. Out of
          Print. [This is been superceded, but gives an idea of the early
          approach]
          
   [JRF48]
          Kaplan, Mordecai M. High Holiday Prayerbook: Yom Kippur. Jewish
          Reconstructionist Federation; 1948. Hardcover. ISBN
          0-935457-30-5.
          [11][Buy at Amazon:
          http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0935457305/socculturejew
          ish/] 
          
   [JRF58]
          Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation. Festival Prayer Book.
          Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation, New York. 1958. Out of
          Print. [Festival Liturgy]

------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: How do I obtain copies of the Reading Lists?

                                  Answer:
   
   There are a number of different ways to obtain copies of the Reading
   Lists:
     * WWW. If you are reading this on Usenet, and would like to see an
       online, hyperlinked version, go visit [2]http://www.scjfaq.org/.
       This is the "web" version of the FAQ; the version posted to Usenet
       is generated from the web version. Note that the www.scjfaq.org
       version is a copy of the actual master version; if you want to
       access the master, visit [3]http://master.scjfaq.org/.
       Alternatively, if you would like to see the posted version through
       the web, visit [4]http://shamash.org/listarchives/scj-faq/. The
       FAQ is in the subdirectory "FAQ"; the reading lists are in the
       subdirectory "rl".
     * Email. Scjfaq.org also provides an autoretriever that allows one
       to obtain a copy of the reading lists by return Email. To use the
       autoretriever, you send a retrieval request to
       [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the request in the body of the
       message. A more reliable way to retrieve these files is through
       the [6]FAQ autoretriever
       ([7]http://www.mljewish.org/bin/autoresp.cgi). For the FAQ, the
       request has the form:
       
     send faq partname
       For the reading list, the request has the form:
       
     send rl partname
       "Partname" is replaced by the name of the part, as shown in the
       general index. The following is a short summary of the mapping of
       partnames for the Reading Lists:
          + [8]general: Introduction and General. Includes book sources,
            starting points for beginners, starting points for non-Jewish
            readers, General Judaism, General Jewish Thought, General
            Jewish History, Contemporary Judaism, Noachide Laws, Torah
            and Torah Commentary, Talmud and Talmudic Commentary,
            Mishnah, Midrash, Halachic Codes, Becoming An Observant Jew,
            Women and Judaism, and Science and Judaism.
          + [9]traditional: Traditional Liturgy, Practice, Lifestyle,
            Holidays. Includes Traditional Liturgy; Traditional
            Philosophy and Ethics; Prayer; Traditional Practice; The
            Household; Life, Death, and In-Between; and The Cycle Of
            Holidays.
          + [10]mysticism: Kabbalah, Mysticism, and Messianism. Includes
            Academic and Religious treatments of Kabbalah, Sprituality,
            and the Jewish notion of the Messiah.
          + [11]reform: Reform/Progressive Judaism
          + [12]conservative: Conservative Judaism
          + [13]reconstructionist: Reconstructionist Judaism
          + [14]humanistic: Humanistic Judaism (Society for Humanistic
            Judaism)
          + [15]chasidism: Chassidism. Includes general information on
            historical chassidism, as well as specific information on
            Lubavitch (Chabad), Satmar, Breslaw (Breslov), and other
            approaches.
          + [16]zionism: Zionism. Includes Zionism and The Development Of
            Israel, The Founders, Zionistic Movements, and Judaism in
            Israel.
          + [17]antisemitism: Antisemitism. Includes sections on
            Antisemitism, What Led to The Holocaust, Medieval Oppression,
            Antisemitism Today (Including Dealing with Hate Groups),
            Judaism and Christianity, and Judaism, Freemasonry and other
            rumors.
          + [18]intermarriage: Intermarriage. Includes sections on "So
            You're Considering Intermarriage?", The Traditional
            Viewpoint, Conversion, and Coping With Life As An
            Intermarried.
          + [19]childrens: Books for Jewish Children. Includes sections
            on Birth and Naming, Raising a Child, Family Guidebooks,
            Upsheren, Bar/Bat Mitzvah, Confirmation, Holiday Books for
            Children, Liturgy for Children, Bible and Torah for Children,
            Jewish History for Children, Jewish Theology for Children,
            Israel, Learning Hebrew, and Jewish Stories.
       The following is a short summary of the mapping to partnames for
       the FAQ:
          + [20]01-FAQ-intro: Section [21]1: Network and Newsgroup
            Information.
          + [22]02-Who-We-Are: Section [23]2: Who We Are
          + [24]03-Torah-Halacha: Sections [25]3, [26]4: Torah; Halachic
            Authority
          + [27]04-Observance: Sections [28]5, [29]6, [30]7, [31]8:
            Jewish Holidays; Jewish Dietary Law and Kashrut; Sabbath and
            Holiday Observance; Woman and Marriage
          + [32]05-Worship: Sections [33]9, [34]10, [35]11: Jewish
            Worship; Conversion, Intermarriage, and "Who is a Jew?";
            Miscellaneous Practice Questions
          + [36]06-Jewish-Thought: Section [37]12: Jewish Thought
          + [38]07-Jews-As-Nation: Section [39]13: Jews as a Nation
          + [40]08-Israel: Section [41]14: Jews and Israel
          + [42]09-Antisemitism: Sections [43]15, [44]16, [45]17: Churban
            Europa (The Holocaust); Antisemitism and Rumors about Jews;
            Countering Missionaries
          + [46]10-Reform: Section [47]18: Reform/Progressive Judaism
          + [48]11-Miscellaneous: Sections [49]19, [50]20: Miscellaneous;
            References and Getting Connected
          + [51]12-Kids: Section [52]21: Jewish Childrearing Related
            Questions
          + [53]mail-order: Mail Order Judaica
       Alternatively, you may send a message to
       [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the following line in the body
       of the message:
       send usenet/news.answers/judaism/(portionname)
       Where (portionname) is replaced by the appropriate subdirectory
       and filenames; for example, to get the first part of the reading
       list, one would say:
        send usenet/news.answers/judaism/reading-lists/general
     * Anonymous FTP: All portions of the FAQ and of the reading lists
       are archived on [55]rtfm.mit.edu and are available for anonymous
       FTP from the pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism/FAQ directory (URL
       [56]ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism/FAQ/).
       Similarly, the parts of the reading lists are stored in the
       pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism/reading-lists directory (URL:
       [57]ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism/reading-lis
       ts). Note that the archived versions of the FAQ and reading lists
       are the posted versions; that is, they are each one large ASCII
       file.

------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: Credits

   This list is based on research done at the University of Judaism in
   January 1993 by [EMAIL PROTECTED] Contributions were also made by
   Sharon Morrison and Aaron Seidman. It was remodeled in July 2000.
   Suggestions for additions or deletions are welcome, as are brief
   annotations for the entries.
   
   A special thank you... Special thanks for her patience and
   understanding go to my wife, Karen, who put up with me hiding at the
   computer for the two months it took to complete the July/August 2000
   remodel of the entire soc.culture.jewish FAQ and Reading Lists. If you
   think the effort was worth it, drop her a note c/o
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------------------------------------
--
Please mail additions or corrections to me at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

End of Judaism Reading List Part VI (Reconstructionist) Digest
**************************
-------




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