Saturday, April 5, 2025

Shari Rabin's "The Jewish South"

Shari Rabin is Associate Professor of Jewish Studies and Religion at Oberlin College. A historian of American religions and modern Judaism, she received her PhD in Religious Studies from Yale University in 2015. Her first book, Jews on the Frontier: Religion and Mobility in Nineteenth-century America, was the winner of the National Jewish Book Award in American Jewish Studies and a finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature.

Rabin applied the “Page 99 Test” to her new book, The Jewish South: An American History, and reported the following:
The only full paragraph on page 99 of my book reads:
In Richmond, Reverend George Jacobs kept a list of the soldiers whose funerals he had performed; they came from Louisiana, Texas, and South Carolina, as well as Virginia. Charleston’s Jewish cemetery records the fates of Isaac D. Valentine, felled in June 1862 during the battle of Sessionville; of Isaac Barrett Cohen, killed in January 1865 at Fort Fisher; and of Marx E. Cohen Jr., killed on March 19, 1865, at age 26, “on the battlefield of Bentonsville, N.C. . . . by volunteering the performance of a service in which he lost his life.” In death these men were cast as heroic Jewish Confederates, although in life those two identities did not always prove so stable or harmonious, in personal experience or in the minds of their fellow white southerners. For them, the war was over, but for the families and communities that survived them it would last much longer, confronting them with important new choices about how to understand the recent past and what kind of future to build.
I think this gives a good sense of the book, although it is the end of a chapter and only a half of a page! It’s also worth noting that the book covers a very broad temporal scope, from the 1660s to the 1960s.

The Civil War is central to understanding the American South and to my study, however. On this page and throughout the book, I tried to present southern Jewish history in all of its complexity. Many have assumed that all southern Jews were supporters of the Confederacy and that wartime antisemitism was limited to the North. My chapters on the Civil War show that Jews – like other southerners – could be ambivalent about secession and war and that they did experience forms of exclusion. And as this page notes, the Civil War would cast a long shadow on the South and the nation for decades to come. Finally, this page highlights my original research, my interest in gravestones as primary sources, and my literary style. I really tried to write a historical study that was based on rigorous research but that would also keep the attention of a broader reading public.
Visit Shari Rabin's website.

--Marshal Zeringue