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The Diasporic Jewish Question of the Best Regime

Julie E. Cooper, Tel Aviv University

Mon, 11/17 · 4:30 pm6:00 pm · 301 Wooten Hall

Program in Judaic Studies; University Center for Human Values; Program in Law and Normative Thinking

The Program in Judaic Studies invites you to this talk by Julie E. Cooper on Monday, November 17, which is co-sponsored by the University Center for Human Values and the Program in Law and Normative Thinking.

Abstract
Since October 7, we have witnessed an unprecedented crisis of confidence in the liberal state and the nation-state — the political frameworks which promised a new era of Jewish vitality after the nadir of the Holocaust. At a moment when post-WWII commonplaces about the regimes that are “good for the Jews” have begun to crumble, diasporic traditions of political thought assume new resonance. In this talk, I showcase a forgotten mode of Jewish political thought, which I call the diasporic analysis of state forms. In the first half of the twentieth century, the analysis and critique of state forms was an urgent project for Jewish thinkers from across the ideological spectrum. Precisely because diasporic political formations are threatened by Western doctrines of sovereignty, Jewish thinkers were impelled to study the various forms that states have historically taken. My talk will focus on Hannah Arendt and Salo Baron — scholars who anatomized the different regimes under which Jews have lived, attaching near-existential significance to variations in state structures. Inspired by these traditions, I encourage contemporary scholars of Jewish politics to develop a critical taxonomy of state forms – at a crisis moment when neither the nation-state nor the liberal state can be said to have offered a definitive solution to the Jewish question.

Open to the public. Refreshments will be available.

More about Julie E. Cooper

Julie E. Cooper is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at Tel Aviv University, where she also heads the Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism. Her research interests include the history of political theory; early modern political theory, especially Hobbes and Spinoza; secularism and secularization; Jewish political thought; and modern Jewish thought. She is the author of Secular Powers: Humility in Modern Political Thought (Chicago, 2013). Her work has appeared in journals including Review of Politics, The Historical Journal, Political Theory, and Jewish Quarterly Review. She is currently working on a book project, tentatively entitled Politics Without Sovereignty? Exile, State, and Territory in Jewish Thought, which examines modern attempts to reimagine and rehabilitate Judaism’s national and political dimensions.

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