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Wrestling with God and Men: Homosexuality in the Jewish Tradition »

Book cover image of Wrestling with God and Men: Homosexuality in the Jewish Tradition by Steven Greenberg

Authors: Steven Greenberg
ISBN-13: 9780299190903, ISBN-10: 0299190900
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Date Published: February 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Steven Greenberg

Rabbi Steven Greenberg is a senior teaching fellow at CLAL, the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership.

Book Synopsis

Rabbi Greenburg offers an intimate and personal look at homosexuality in Hasidic and Orthodox communities as told through the day-to-day stories of their gay and lesbian members. If the history of an uncontested ancient law is not be denied, he says, neither is the reality of human experience: conversation is necessary. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Publishers Weekly

Defying more than 3,000 years of Torah tradition and belief, Greenberg, an Orthodox rabbi who recently publicized his homosexuality, embarks on a thorough, if questionable, trek to reevaluate the overt biblical prohibition of male-male relations. Central to his argument is a rereading of Leviticus 18:22, "Do not lie with a male as one lies with a woman; it is an abhorrence" (JPS translation) to be understood as "And (either a female or) a male you shall not sexually penetrate to humiliate [;] it is abhorrent." The story of Sodom's destruction, the love between David and Jonathan and the creation of Adam and Eve figure prominently as sources of new and interesting perspectives, yet they are all based on subjective evaluations that bear no textual confirmation. While he is obviously well versed in Torah knowledge and rabbinic law, Greenberg admits that he is "not a disinterested party on the matter of homosexuality"; indeed, many of his arguments stretch the truth or omit vital segments of biblical text to reach their desired conclusion, and, in addition, are fraught with expressions of unease such as "maybe" and "perhaps." This is not to say that his attempt bears no fruit. He effectively portrays the plight of closeted and openly gay Orthodox Jews who struggle daily with their sexual desires and with the knowledge that the Torah and the rabbis forbid homosexuality. While Greenberg's controversial biblical claims on this long-taboo topic may infuriate some and gratify others, his book arouses deep empathy for Orthodox homosexuals. (Feb.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Author's Notes
Introduction3
1The Birth of Gender and Desire41
2The Sons of God, Ham, and the Sodomites60
3Leviticus74
4Lesbian Omissions86
5Princely Love99
6Rabbinic Heroes106
7The Queer Middle Ages113
8The Legal Literature124
9Rav Moshe and the Problem of Why135
10The Rationale of Reproduction147
11The Rationale of Social Disruption166
12The Rationale of Category Confusion175
13The Rationale of Humiliation and Violence192
14Admitting Difference217
15Welcoming Synagogues253
Notes257
Bibliography287
Index291

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