Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age

Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age

by Ayala Fader
Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age

Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age

by Ayala Fader

Paperback

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Overview

A revealing look at Jewish men and women who secretly explore the outside world, in person and online, while remaining in their ultra-Orthodox religious communities

What would you do if you questioned your religious faith, but revealing that would cause you to lose your family and the only way of life you had ever known? Hidden Heretics tells the fascinating, often heart-wrenching stories of married ultra-Orthodox Jewish men and women in twenty-first-century New York who lead “double lives” in order to protect those they love. While they no longer believe that God gave the Torah to Jews at Mount Sinai, these hidden heretics continue to live in their families and religious communities, even as they surreptitiously break Jewish commandments and explore forbidden secular worlds in person and online. Drawing on five years of fieldwork with those living double lives and the rabbis, life coaches, and religious therapists who minister to, advise, and sometimes excommunicate them, Ayala Fader investigates religious doubt and social change in the digital age.

The internet, which some ultra-Orthodox rabbis call more threatening than the Holocaust, offers new possibilities for the age-old problem of religious uncertainty. Fader shows how digital media has become a lightning rod for contemporary struggles over authority and truth. She reveals the stresses and strains that hidden heretics experience, including the difficulties their choices pose for their wives, husbands, children, and, sometimes, lovers. In following those living double lives, who range from the religiously observant but open-minded on one end to atheists on the other, Fader delves into universal quandaries of faith and skepticism, the ways digital media can change us, and family frictions that arise when a person radically transforms who they are and what they believe.

In stories of conflicts between faith and self-fulfillment, Hidden Heretics explores the moral compromises and divided loyalties of individuals facing life-altering crossroads.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691234489
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 04/05/2022
Series: Princeton Studies in Culture and Technology , #41
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 670,921
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Ayala Fader is professor of anthropology at Fordham University. She is the author of Mitzvah Girls: Bringing Up the Next Generation of Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn (Princeton).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

1 Life-Changing Doubt, the Internet, and a Crisis of Authority 1

Part I

2 The Jewish Blogosphere and the Heretical Counterpublic 31

3 Ultra-Orthodox Rabbis versus the Internet 61

Part II

4 The Morality of a Married Double Life 91

5 The Treatment of Doubt 121

6 Double-Life Worlds 151

7 Family Secrets 181

8 Endings and Beginnings 210

Appendix. What You Need to Know about Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Languages 229

Glossary 233

Notes 237

References 251

Index 261

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Hidden Heretics offers an utterly compelling look at the way the digital age makes possible the emergence of social worlds in unexpected places. It is also a thoughtful account of the tension between religious belief and religious ethics and how they are intertwined and independent."—T. M. Luhrmann, author of When God Talks Back

"Compulsively readable, Hidden Heretics is a gem for scholars and general readers alike."—Shulem Deen, author of All Who Go Do Not Return

"By charting, in exquisite detail, the profound danger—and excitement—of life-changing religious doubt among the ultra-Orthodox in New York, Hidden Heretics demonstrates how contemporary digital technology has become the arena where the most urgent questions of religious modernity are being encountered, with renewed exigency and risk. This is necessary reading for anyone interested in religion today."—Robert A. Orsi, author of History and Presence

"There are a fairly substantial number of books about those who have defected from Hasidic communities, but this is by far the most insightful. It focuses not on those who have already left or are necessarily on their way out of these communities, but on those who remain embedded while wrestling with serious doubts. Hidden Heretics is an extraordinary accomplishment."—Jonathan Boyarin, Cornell University

"Fader has written a timely, daring, and important book on religious doubt in the digital age that illuminates the complex struggles of ultra-Orthodox double-lifers with sensitivity and insight. Hidden Heretics is fascinating and wonderful."—Janet McIntosh, Brandeis University

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