TY - JOUR A1 - Krah, Markus T1 - Further foward thriugh the past T2 - Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies N2 - From the 1940s well into the 1960s, a new sociocultural constellation let American Jews redefine their relationship to the religious tradition. This article analyzes the response of a religious elite of rabbis and intellectuals to this process, which was driven by various factors. Many American Jews were at least one generation away from traditional Judaism, which seemed out of place in postwar America. Liberal Judaism, with its narrow concept of religion, on the other hand, while fitting a larger social consensus, did not satiate many Jews' spiritual and identity needs. Sensing this deficit, rabbis and other religious thinkers explored broader concepts of Judaism. Religious journals that sprang up in the postwar decades served as vehicles for the attempt to understand Judaism in broader, cultural terms, while preserving a religious core. The article shows how in this search religious thinkers turned to the Eastern European past as a resource. As other groups similarly tried to mine this past for the sake of their present agendas, its reconstruction became a key process in the transformation of postwar American Judaism and its relationship to the tradition. Y1 - 2017 UR - https://publishup.uni-potsdam.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/54823 SN - 0882-8539 SN - 1534-5165 VL - 35 SP - 111 EP - 131 PB - Purdue University Press CY - West Lafayette ER -