Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund Lecture: "How Religion Divides And Unites Americans…And Why It's Basically Good For The Jews" with Robert Putnam

Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund Lecture: "How Religion Divides And Unites Americans…And Why It's Basically Good For The Jews" with Robert Putnam
Date
Sun March 13th 2016, 5:00 - 6:30pm
Event Sponsor
Humanities Center, Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, Taube Center for Jewish Studies
Location
Levinthal Hall - Stanford Humanities Center- 424 Santa Teresa St.

Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund Lecture

Robert Putnam, Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy, Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government, in conversation with Jane Shaw, Dean for Religious Life and Professor of Religious Studies

There exists a great puzzle of religion in the United States: America is unusually religious, unusually diverse religiously, and yet unusually tolerant. In most countries, intense religiosity combined with stark religious differences equals wars, violence, and civil disorder. Why have we not torn ourselves apart along the religious fault lines that have increasingly come to divide us? In his upcoming lecture, Robert Putnam will draw on three of the most comprehensive surveys ever conducted of religion and public life in America to examine the complex interaction of religion, politics, and social movements over the past half-century and how this specifically impacts Jewish life. He will offer a nuanced balance sheet of how religion both contributes to and detracts from the vibrancy and stability of American democracy.

“Between Race and Religion: Contemporary American Jewish Life” series with the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity.

Co-sponsored by the Humanities Center.