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Contemporary Jewish thought grapples with profound questions of Holocaust memory, religious ethics, and spiritual interpretation - themes powerfully explored in four recent scholarly works. *Impossible Images: Contemporary Art after the Holocaust* breaks new ground in analyzing how artists and historians navigate the visual representation of genocide, with Hornstein, Levitt, and Silberstein assembling innovative perspectives on post-Holocaust artistic expression. Harold Kushner's *The Lord is My Shepherd* reframes the Twenty-third Psalm as a three-act journey through faith, suffering, and spiritual growth, offering theological insights for confronting personal tragedy. In *To Do the Right and the Good*, Elliot Dorff constructs a comprehensive Jewish social ethics framework addressing modern challenges of pluralism and procedural justice, though notably sidestepping contentious political debates. Moshe Idel's *Absorbing Infinities* traces the evolution of kabbalistic hermeneutics from ancient rabbinic traditions through mystical contemplative practices, while Mel Scult's edited volume of Mordecai Kaplan's journals provides unprecedented access to American Jewish institutional life between 1913-1934, illuminating both Jewish Theological Seminary dynamics and Reconstructionism's intellectual origins. Together, these works demonstrate the vital ongoing dialogue between traditional Jewish thought and contemporary moral, spiritual, and communal challenges.

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Published 2003
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Bernard Glassman