Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 240
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-4422-0045-6 • Hardback • December 2009 • $74.00 • (£57.00)
978-1-4422-0047-0 • eBook • December 2009 • $70.00 • (£54.00)
Eric Maroney is a freelance writer and works at Cornell University. He is also the author of Religious Syncretism.
Chapter 1 A Neutral Piece of Land: The Jewish State
Chapter 2 So If the King of Israel Should Come With His Men: The Lost Tribes in History and Myth
Chapter 3 King Solomon Loved Many Strange Women: The Jewish Kingdom of Ethiopia
Chapter 4 Though We Are Far From Zion: The Khazar Jewish Kingdom
Chapter 5 And Jews Were Independent of Any Gentile Yoke: The Jewish Tribes of the Hijaz and the Jewish Kingdom of Himyar
Chapter 6 In the Manner of the Jewish Tradition: The Jewish Kingdom of Adiabene
Chapter 7 They Have No Settled, Agreed Beliefs: The Kahina and the Berbers
Chapter 8 A Jewish National State: The Soviet Jewish Autonomous Region in Birobidzhan
Chapter 9 Who Is a Jew? Zion and Identity
Chapter 10 Bibliography
Eric Maroney has written a lively and engaging account of Jewish political entities outside the Land of Israel over the past two millennia. Both the mythical narratives and the documented historical experiences discussed in this volume attest to the diverse manifestations of Jewish national sentiment among diasporic communities from ancient times to modern.
— Aviel Roshwald, Professor of History, Georgetown University
Any reader who seeks to learn about Jewish-governed states in unexpected lands and the history of conversions to Judaism in those states would do well to savor this engaging and well-researched study.
— Kevin Alan Brook, author, The Jews of Khazaria
This well-done and revealing study shows that, even after the final, futile revolt against Roman rule in Judea in the first century, A.D., Jews exercised sovereignty in several regions outside the traditional Jewish homeland. . . . This is an informative and surprising examination of some obscure aspects of Jewish history.
— Booklist, January 2010
The Other Zions captures the real and the imagined power of the concept of Zion.
— Jewish Book World, Summer 2010
Maroney's book covers a remarkable amount of ground....He writes well, lays out evidence and arguments clearly, and appears to be a reliable guide through the thicket of anecdote, rumour and legend which enshrouds the history of many of these far-off times and places.
— Outlook
The Other Zions challenges the dominant myth that the Zionist movement was the fulfillment of a millennia-old and singular desire of Diaspora Jews to be 'returned' to their home in the Land of Israel. Eric Maroney's work demonstrates that, from ancient times to the present, the Jews' ability to craft homelands for themselves in regions far from their imagined point of origins has been an important—if overlooked—part of their history.
— Barry Trachtenberg, University at Albany, SUNY, author of The Revolutionary Roots of Modern Yiddish
Together with descriptions of the myths of the Lost Tribes, the Jews of Arabia and Yemen, and the Parthian Kingdom of Adiabene, Eric Maroney presents the history of these Jewish states in an attempt to expand our notion of Jewish nationalism, beyond that of the traditional rabbinical community or the enduring romance of Zionism. In so doing he challenges us with the essential conclusion that in Antiquity and the Middle Ages, Jewish religious authorities were more accepting of who could be a member of the community and thus a Jew, a challenge that he implicitly throws down to the modern Israeli state, whose compromise with rabbinical authorities has led to a far stricter and more restrictive definition.
— Journal Of Modern Jewish Studies