Columbia University Press
When the State Winks
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Reviews
A beautifully written and engaged ethnography of the overlooked topic of state-sponsored conversion to Judaism. Kravel-Tovi illustrates how the complicated playing field of conversion is constrained with tensions between state secularism and religion; Zionism and Judaism; and bureaucracy and sincerity.
Don Seeman, Emory University:
The best recent ethnography of state bureaucratic practice in Israel and the best ethnography of state-assisted conversion more broadly. With clarity of prose, pathbreaking ethnography, and a humanizing argument, Kravel-Tovi’s work moves beyond accounts that treat ‘the state’ as a monolithic and inimical entity. Real people—rabbis, converts, and state workers—emerge from these pages, not stick figures of the sociological imagination.
Leora Batnitzky, Princeton University:
When the State Winks is an excellent, original work that uniquely situates its analysis not just within an anthropological framework but also within a broad, humanistic one. Kravel-Tovi tells a compelling story about the political and personal complexities of conversion in Israel that will be of interest to anthropologists, sociologists, and historians as well as scholars of Judaism and religion more generally.
Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University:
The question of who is allowed to convert to Judaism in Israel, and how and when, is deeply charged with both spiritual and political commitments. Kravel-Tovi's insightful, thoughtful book helps us to understand the nature of these contradictions and their consequences and the way that converts themselves come to experience their conversion.
Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University:
In this probe of state-religion relations in Israel, Michal Kravel-Tovi brings the critical but sympathetic curiosity of a skilled ethnographer to explore the use of religious conversion for the purpose of creating national belonging. Addressing the substantial divergence between rabbinical practice and theological ideals and portraying converts whose reasons for choosing Judaism are often practical rather than spiritual, she shows how officials of state as well as rabbinical judges wink collusively at the short shrift given to doctrinal requirements in favor of well-trained performances of sincerity.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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Prologue. The Naked Truth on Tel Aviv’s Beaches
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Introduction. Taking Winking Seriously
10 - PART 1. THE CONVERSION MISSION
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ONE. National Mission
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TWO. State Workers
92 - PART 2. THE CONVERSION PERFORMANCE
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THREE. Legible Signs
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FOUR. Dramaturgical Entanglements
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FIVE. Biographical Scripts
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Epilogue. Winking Like a State
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Glossary
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Notes
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References
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Index
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