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"In the decades directly following the Holocaust, American Jewish leaders anxiously debated how to preserve and produce what they considered authentic Jewish culture, fearful that growing affluence and suburbanization threatened the future of Jewish life. Many communal educators and rabbis contended that without educational interventions, Judaism as they understood it would disappear altogether. They pinned their hopes on residential summer camps for Jewish youth: institutions that sprang up across the U.S. in the postwar decades as places for children and teenagers to socialize, recreate, and experience Jewish culture. Adults' fears, hopes, and dreams about the Jewish future inflected every element of camp life, from the languages they taught to what was encouraged romantically and permitted sexually. But adult plans did not constitute everything that occurred at camp: children and teenagers also shaped these sleepaway camps to mirror their own desires and interests and decided whether to accept or resist the ideas and ideologies their camp leaders promoted. Focusing on the lived experience of campers and camp counselors, The Jews of Summer demonstrates how a cultural crisis birthed a rite of passage that remains a significant influence in American Jewish life"--
List of contents
Introduction: The Jewish Summer Camp: Between Fantasy and Reality
1. "Under Optimum Conditions": American Jews and the Rise of the Summer Camp
2. A Matter of Time: Constructing Camp Life for "Creative Survival"
3. Jews Playing Games: Role-Play, Sociodrama, and Color War
4. "A Little Suffering Goes a Long Way": Tisha B'Av, Ghetto Day, and the Shadow of the Holocaust
5. The Language Cure: Embracing and Evolving Yiddishism and Hebraism
6. "Is This What You Call Being Free?" Power and Youth Culture in the Camper Republic
7. Summer Flings and Fuzzy Rings: Camper Romance, Erotic Zionism, and Intermarriage Anxiety
8. Jewish Camping Post-Postwar
Conclusion
About the author
Sandra Fox is visiting assistant professor of Hebrew Judaic Studies and Director of the Archive of the Jewish Left Project at New York University, and founder and executive producer of the Yiddish-language podcast
Vaybertaytsh: A Feminist Podcast in Yiddish.