<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This study of Jewish responses to Enlightenment ideals and political reforms, focused on the prominent Mediterranean community of Livorno, illuminates dynamics of integration and separation that complicate narratives about the transformations of European Jews toward the end of the early modern period.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This study of Jewish responses to Enlightenment ideals and political reforms, focused on the prominent Mediterranean community of Livorno, illuminates dynamics of integration and separation that complicate narratives about the transformations of European Jews toward the end of the early modern period.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Mediterranean Enlightenment</i> is a long overdue cultural history of one of the largest and most important Jewish communities in the eighteenth century. Far more than merely a local study, though, it invites us to rethink the impact of the Enlightenment on European Jews and to reconsider the dynamics of acculturation and differentiation among different ethnic groups in the cosmopolitan port cities of the early modern period.--Matthias B. Lehmann "<i>American Historical Review</i>"<br><br>Bregoli's work is groundbreaking not only because it refines our understanding of how the Enlightenment impacted different Jewish communities, but also because it forces us to re-evaluate the centrality of anti-religious thinking in the Enlightenment in general. Bregoli's study of Livorno provides a compelling case of a community that embraced modernity and the Enlightenment, even though it resisted the religious reforms that often came with it.--Flora Cassen "<i>Journal of Modern Italian Studies</i>"<br><br>Despite the scholarly character of the book, meant to clarify how Jewish minorities related to non-Jewish cultural traditions in 18th-century Mediterranean regions, the book is very enjoyable even to a reader that is not specialized in Jewish studies . . . The book is without doubt an important contribution to the knowledge of Tuscan history and it also demonstrates the importance of studying Tuscany as a separate cultural and institutional reality.--Maurizio Tani "<i>Nordicum-Mediterraneum</i>"<br><br>Exploring a wide range of archival and literary sources, Francesca Bregoli combines cultural, intellectual, social, and political history to add nuance to the emerging picture of how communities and Jewish intellectuals interacted with Enlightenment culture and the reforming-absolutist state . . . Highly recommended for academic libraries.--Harvey Sukenic "<i>Association of Jewish Libraries</i>"<br><br>In <i>Mediterranean Enlightenment</i>, Francesca Bregoli marshals an array of new archival sources to illuminate Jewish intellectual, political, and cultural life in eighteenth century Livorno. This impressive and significant work of scholarship challenges the conventional narrative of the role of the Haskalah movement, of port cities, and of the very definition of what modernity and tradition meant for Jews. Its implications will resonate far beyond its particular subject.--Elisheva Carlebach "Columbia University"<br><br>This book fills a significant gap in Jewish and Italian historiographies in an impressive and exemplary fashion. It will immediately command attention as a major scholarly work.--Lois Dubin "Smith College"<br><br>This is a complex story and one that Bregoli has finely crafted, for which she earns our thanks. This book is a book that must be read.--Kenneth Stow "<i>Jewish History</i>"<br><br>Ultimately, the major contribution of <i>Mediterranean Enlightenment</i> is the use of Livorno to reframe the eighteenth-century European Jewish experience by offering a different model of the dynamics of continuity and change...Bregoli's book deserves a place on the bookshelf next to the works of David Sorkin and Shmuel Feiner on Germany, David Ruderman and Todd Endelman on England, Lois Dubin on eighteenth-century Trieste, and Jay Berkovitz on Metz.--Adam Shear "<i>H-Judaic</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Francesca Bregoli is Assistant Professor of History at Queens College, City University of New York, where she also holds the Joseph and Oro Halegua Chair in Greek and Sephardic Jewish Studies.
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