Devorah Baum is lecturer in English literature and critical theory, University of Southampton, and affiliate researcher with the Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/Non-Jewish Relations. She is the codirector of the creative documentary feature film The New Man. She lives in London, UK.
A scintillating exploration of how feelings stereotypicaly associated with Jewishness are not quite so uncomplicatedly negative as is surmised and, what's more, increasingly common in a globalised, hyper-connected society. -Keiron Pim, Spectator ...an immensely informative, interesting and important book... we might well emulate Baum's bold and bracing book by interrogating our feelings, complex and contradictory though they may be, and try to understand what they tell us about ourselves and our world. -Glenn C. Altschuler, Jerusalem Post Like the phenomenon it describes, this book is intellectually luminous, psychologically penetrating, existentially anxious, and wonderfully funny. -Zadie Smith Baum has startling clarity about complicated issues. The fluency of her amusement and engagement-her deadpan provocations, her intriguing formulations-gives Feeling Jewish an irresistible originality. After reading this book you will feel differently about your feelings and so about virtually everything else. -Adam Phillips Feeling Jewish is a wonderful book for everyone who has feelings, whether or not they are Jewish. Devorah Baum gives us psychoanalysis (Jewish), literature (sometimes Jewish), and feelings (definitely Jewish) and makes them all come alive. She also gives us herself-a great new, neurotic friend. -Stephen Frosh, Birkbeck College This marvellous book offers a rich, subtle, and thought-provoking analysis not only of 'feeling Jewish' but of a range of questions that go far beyond this. Challenging received ideas, Baum invites us to rethink assumptions and divisions we take for granted, from identity to gender, from love to hate, from doubt to certainty, and from insider to outsider. -Darian Leader, psychoanalyst and author Baum guides us with great poise and comic verve through the strange and confusing labyrinth we call 'feeling.' As stimulating intellectually as it is involving emotionally, this sparklingly original book brilliantly attests to the intricate and mutually enriching relation of feeling to thinking. -Josh Cohen, Goldsmiths, University of London