Tanya Jones explores the role of the Reform movement to blend American identity and Judaism in the Gilded Age, using St. Louis as a case study. This essay is the winner of the 2017 Morrow Prize, presented annually by the Missouri Conference on History for the best student paper on a Missouri topic presented at its annual conference in March
Historians’ traditional narrative regarding religious freedom in the colonial period and early repub...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
This thesis explores the contributing factors that affect the rates of assimilation in contemporary ...
The topic of this Independent Study is the modem identity of Reform Jews in America and factors with...
This dissertation investigates the rhetorical practices of a tradition: the Reform Movement in Judai...
The purpose of this project was to call into question a commonly held belief in mainstream academia ...
Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on July 28, 2009)The entire dissertation/thesis...
This essay argues that Reconstructionist Judaism, though first and foremost a Jewish movement, was p...
In America, Jews had to learn how to explain and present themselves to non-Jews in order to survive ...
The centrality of marriage to American identity dates back to the founding of the nation. Americans ...
Despite the emphasis on ethnicity and crosscultural contact that permeates the New Western History, ...
The first generation of Americans born after the Revolution found themselves in uncharted territory,...
Though many historians have studied the wave of German Jewish immigration that occurred during the n...
Benevolent and mutual benefit societies, associations for the care of the sick and burial of the dea...
The twentieth-century was a period of adaptation and change for Portland’s Jewish Community. Orthodo...
Historians’ traditional narrative regarding religious freedom in the colonial period and early repub...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
This thesis explores the contributing factors that affect the rates of assimilation in contemporary ...
The topic of this Independent Study is the modem identity of Reform Jews in America and factors with...
This dissertation investigates the rhetorical practices of a tradition: the Reform Movement in Judai...
The purpose of this project was to call into question a commonly held belief in mainstream academia ...
Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on July 28, 2009)The entire dissertation/thesis...
This essay argues that Reconstructionist Judaism, though first and foremost a Jewish movement, was p...
In America, Jews had to learn how to explain and present themselves to non-Jews in order to survive ...
The centrality of marriage to American identity dates back to the founding of the nation. Americans ...
Despite the emphasis on ethnicity and crosscultural contact that permeates the New Western History, ...
The first generation of Americans born after the Revolution found themselves in uncharted territory,...
Though many historians have studied the wave of German Jewish immigration that occurred during the n...
Benevolent and mutual benefit societies, associations for the care of the sick and burial of the dea...
The twentieth-century was a period of adaptation and change for Portland’s Jewish Community. Orthodo...
Historians’ traditional narrative regarding religious freedom in the colonial period and early repub...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
This thesis explores the contributing factors that affect the rates of assimilation in contemporary ...