
Free as a Jew
A Personal Memoir of National Self-Liberation
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Narrated by:
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Suzanne Toren
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By:
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Ruth R. Wisse
A Jewish child born into the worst of times in Europe grows up during the best of times in North America - only to recognize that it could be moving back in the opposite direction.
First came parents with the good sense to flee Europe in 1940 and the good fortune to reach the land of freedom. Their daughter, Ruth, grew up in the shadow of genocide - but in tandem with the birth of Israel, which remained her lodestar. She learned that although Jewishness is biologically transmitted, democracy is not, and both require intensive, intelligent transmission through education in each and every generation. They need adults with the confidence to teach their importance. Ruth tried to take on that challenge as dangers to freedom mounted and shifted sides on the political spectrum. At the high point of her teaching at Harvard University, she witnessed the unraveling of standards of honesty and truth until the academy she left was no longer the one she had entered.
©2021 Ruth R. Wisse (P)2021 Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















Truth
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Amazing listen
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If I didn’t know better I would think this book was written after this unimaginable event. Her incite into Israeli and global politics is remarkable.
Her life experience in academia give foreshadowing of the future of antisemitism on the elite college campuses.
I highly recommend this book for a greater understanding of the past and current state of antisemitism.
Cheers to Ruth Wisse for standing up for her beliefs and not group think!!
Amazing
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great book
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a scholar’s spleen
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The author, Ruth Wisse, is notable for her open sincerity, but the narrator of the book adopts of tone of affected theatricality, often becoming ironic and sometimes snide.
One concrete example illustrates the problem. In the beginning of the second chapter, there's a line about the author's brother giving a speech based on a book the audience was unlikely to have read. The narrator speaks "unlikely to have read" in a tone of theatrical snideness, but the context makes clear that the point is the book was in English and the audience wouldn't have read it because they're Yiddish speakers (i.e., not that the author thinks they're deserving of contempt.)
In the end, I found it impossible to overcome the jarring mismatch of the narrator's abrasive persona with the deeply-felt, often serious subject matter.
Great Book Marred by Unpleasant Narration
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