Advanced Search
Search options
JPR Home
EJRA Home
Search EJRA
Topic Collections
Author Collections
Add to EJRA
Terms of Use
Contact Us
Search results
Your search found 1 item
Home
/ Search Results
Locating an elusive ethics: surface and depth in a Jewish ethnography
Author(s):
Sheldon, Ruth
Editor(s):
Strhan, Anna; Robbins, Joel; Henig, David
Date:
2021
Topics:
Main Topic: Other, Ethnography, Orthodox Judaism, Haredi / Strictly Orthodox Jews
Abstract:
In recent years, questions of morality and ethics have become an explicit focus of attention within the social sciences and humanities. Within this burgeoning interdisciplinary field, debates have crystallised between scholars of ‘the good’ and proponents of ‘ordinary ethics’. The stakes here include apparently incommensurable conceptions of moral action, language and subjectivity as well as underlying tensions over disciplinary genealogies. In this chapter, I draw on ethnographic research into Jewish life in Hackney in order to engage these debates from an as yet unexplored perspective. I begin by considering the tensions and consequences of my naming ‘the good’ and ‘ethics’ as a research object and ask how these terms resonate within orthodox Jewish contexts that are also gendered in distinctive ways. I consider what is at stake as I, a somehow ‘assimilated’ Jewish woman, searched for a transcendent ‘Jewish ethics’, and discuss how an ordinary ethics gradually emerged as I learned to stay with the unsettling interplay between surface and depth in my fieldwork. My broader aim is to show how Jewish ethnography as one under-acknowledged ‘other’ within the social sciences can speak back to some implicitly Christian, colonial and masculine grammars structuring this field.