Stock Images: What Cookbooks, Advertisements, and Chicken Soup Recipes Tell Us About Jewish America

Jewish Americana

“The price of Jewish assimilation was Jewish authenticity. The faces of this kind of assimilation were many: secularization, the feminization of Jewish life, and the decline of radical politics were all perceived, at various moments, as gauges of assimilationist tendencies. Middle-classness and suburbanization, however, emerged as two of the clearest signals of assimilation.” 
- Berman


Similarly, Bardis, a prominent Jewish sociologist in the 1950s, found an inverse relationship between Jews' “gentile” education and their connection with their families: the more suburban, the less Jewish.

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