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inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
In How to Be Secular, Jacques Berlinerblau issues a call to the moderates—those who are tired of the belligerence on the fringes—that we return to America’s long tradition of secularism, which seeks to protect both freedom from and ...
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
Secularism: The Basics is a concise and engaging introduction to public discussions of secularism across the globe and this thoroughly updated edition continues to be an ideal starting point for anyone seeking a readable introduction to the ...
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
Cumulatively, this book is a first attempt to reinvigorate an estimable secular, intellectual tradition, albeit one that is currently experiencing a moment of crisis.
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
Berlinerblau (Judaic studies, Hofstra U.) explores the reactions--widely divergent but mostly intense--to Martin Bernal's 1987 publication of the first volume of Black Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization.
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
The House is On Fire -- Finding Our Affinities : An Overview of "Blacks and Jews" Dialogue / by Jacques Berlinerblau -- Liberalism : A Tragic Encounter Between Blacks and (White) Jews / by Terrence Johnson -- Teaching "Blacks and Jews" in ...
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
Berlinerblau argues that in order to procure reliable historical information about 'popular religious groups' (such as women, non-privileged economic strata, heterodox elements) we must search for what he calls 'implicit evidence': mundane ...
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
A must-read for parents thinking about their kids' futures: This book answers the questions most other college resources don't: Who exactly is teaching my kid? What questions to ask on the campus visit?
inauthor:"Jacques Berlinerblau" from books.google.com
The Philip Roth We Don’t Know poses provocative new questions about the author of Portnoy’s Complaint, The Human Stain, and the Zuckerman trilogy first by revisiting the long-running argument about Roth’s misogyny within the context ...