The vast majority of intellectual, religious, and national developments
in modern Judaism revolve around the central idea of "Jewish culture."
This book is the first synoptic view of these developments that
organizes and relates them from this vantage point. The first Jewish
modernization movements perceived culture as the defining trait of the
outside alien social environment to which Jewry had to adapt. To be
"cultured" was to be modern-European, as opposed to
medieval-ghetto-Jewish. In short order, however, the Jewish religious
legacy was redefined retrospectively as a historical "culture," with
fateful consequences for the conception of Judaism as a humanly- and not
only divinely-mandated regime. The conception of Judaism-as-culture took
two main forms: an integrative, vernacular Jewish culture that developed
in tandem with the integration of Jews into the various nations of
western-central Europe and America, and a national Hebrew culture which,
though open to the inputs of modern European society, sought to develop
a revitalized Jewish national identity that ultimately found expression
in the revival of the Jewish homeland and the State of Israel.