Leora Faye Batnitzky (born 1966) is an American philosopher and the current Ronald O. Perelman Professor of Jewish Studies at Princeton University. Her research interests include religion, modern Jewish thought, hermeneutics, and contemporary legal and political theory. She served as Chair of the Department of Religion from 2010 to 2019 and currently serves as Director of Princeton's Program in Judaic Studies.
She has been called "the most incisive and remarkable scholar of modern Jewish thought of our time," and is considered to have introduced a paradigm shift to academic political theology, Zionism, and Judaic Studies.[1], print edition, Daniel H. Weiss. Accessed 9 March 2023; Reviewed Work: How Judaism Became a Religion: An Introduction to Modern Jewish Thought, The Jewish Quarterly Review, Jeffrey Bernstein. Accessed 9 March 2023; Reviewed Work: How Judaism Became a Religion: An Introduction to Modern Jewish Thought, Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, Emily Filler. Accessed 9 March 2023; How Judaism Became a Religion, Book Review, Samuel Moyn. Accessed 9 March 2023 She is recognized as the leading scholar of Leo Strauss.Leo Strauss, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Accessed 9 March 2023.[2]
How Judaism Became a Religion was named by The Forward as one of the most important books to read to understand the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.What books should Jared Kushner have read about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?, The Forward. Accessed 9 March 2023. [3] She has published in popular journals on Jewish-Catholic relations.The Holocaustum of Edith Stein Liberties Journal. Accessed 9 May 2023. [4]
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