logo

icon

icon

icon

icon

icon

  • Books
    • Back Close
    • Academic
      • Back Close
      • Subjects
      • Series
    • Non Fiction
      • Back Close
      • Non-Fiction
      • Anthem Essential Knowledge
    • Education
      • Back Close
      • Anthem Advanced Learning
      • Anthem SCAT Series
      • Other Education
    • Professional
  • Products
    • Back Close
    • Anthem Advanced Introductions
    • Anthem Impact
    • Anthem Enviroexperts Review
    • Anthem Handbooks
    • Partnership Publishing
    • Anthem Editions
    • First Hill Books
  • Author Hub
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
Search
WORK WITH USOPEN ACCESSRIGHTS & PERMISSIONSPRIVACY & COOKIES POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONSACCESSIBILITY
CATALOGUESBOOKSELLERSLIBRARIANSREVIEWERSINSTRUCTORSPARTNERSHIP PUBLISHING
SALES REPRESENTATIONORDERING EBOOKSSHIPPING: NORTH AMERICAShipping: UK, EU & ROWShipping: Australia & NZ

Copyright © 2025 Anthem Press. Registered in England & Wales under No. 02889958.

HomePhilosophyReclaiming the Wicked Son
Reclaiming the Wicked Son
Flyer Cover
Google Review

Reclaiming the Wicked Son

Finding Judaism in Secular Jewish Philosophers

Stephen Stern and Steven Gimbel



Title Details

ISBN: 9781839986161

Pages: 138

Pub Date: March 2022

Imprint: Anthem Press

Request for Desk or Exam copyAdd to Cart

Related Books

Hardback

£80.00 / $125.00

E-Book (WEB PDF)

£25.00 / $40.00

E-Book (EPUB)

£25.00 / $40.00

Reclaiming the Wicked Son: Finding Judaism in Secular Jewish Philosophers takes the ideas of six well-known secular Jewish philosophers—Karl Marx, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ayn Rand, Peter Singer, Noam Chomsky, and Judith Butler—and views them through a wide range of Jewish lenses from the Talmudic tradition and prophetic Judaism to Kabbalist approaches, thereby understanding the 20th-century secular thinkers as on-going elements of a living Jewish intellectual tradition.

Jewish Studies as a field focuses on Judaism, but Jewishness is broader than Judaism, and as a result, a number of thinkers who come from Jewish backgrounds are excluded from the discourse in Jewish Studies. The goal of this volume is to act as a bridge between the religious and secular Jewish discourse communities, allowing a more inclusive and more comprehensive account of Jewish thought. 

While the philosophers who discussed may not have considered themselves to be Jewish philosophers. But, by reading them Judaically, they can be understood in terms of a more robust historical and intellectual context in which they partake of a tradition to which they are not often connected.

Applied Ethics and Human Rights
Dementia and Alzheimer's
Anarchism in Local Governance
Intellectual Entertainments
Religion, Supernaturalism, the Paranormal and Pseudoscience
A Theoretical Approach to Modern American History and Literature