Ridiculously dense and obscure, absurdly erudite, unforgiving both in its prose style and in the scope of the ideas its discussing, this is a hard book to judge. Initially setting out to deconstruct the premise that Judaism is somehow outside modernity, or that spiritual Judaism somehow provides bulwark against the dead values of Enlightenment rationalism, most of the essays only tangentially fulfill the promise of the (absolutely astounding) introduction, a blistering slaughter of the essentialising, parochial, pathetic logic of identity politics with its perpetual attempt to find nice, self contained catgeories to anihilate the class experiences of whole groups of and of the wider post structuralism that subtly underpins it. In an era where the zionist, fascist, settler colonial, Aparteid genocidal pariah state of Israel likes to drapse itself in the most abject and ill fitting clothing of the legacy of Jewish suffering and Jewish history to legitimise its butchery, and where hordes of the intellectually catastrated western media and political figures blurt the word "ANTISHEMEJIZZUM" so hard at any and all critiques of that fucking gangrene spot of a stare you'd think they're veins will burst open, anything which decides to challenge head on the supposed caging of Jewish identity into a fixed box is welcome. Indeed, just on an education level, many of the things Rose brings to the table about Judaism were extremely insightful, especially in just how radically different many of its precepts are compared to its disgusting bastard offspring Christianity.
Indeed, the best essays are the ones closest to her opening essay. Certainly, her essay on Adorno and his relation to Hegel's dialectic and on Nietzsche, are simply some of the best I've ever read on the subject, staggeringly insightful and mind blowing in analysis and almost worth the price tag. Both those, along with the introduction, are 5 stars. Others are almost unreadable in how niche and esoteric their subject matter is (at least 2 i outright skipped), some are repetitive and boring (she makes a valiant attempt to make Walter Benjamin's work understandable and relevent to wider sociology, probably the best attempt, but im not going to pretend i really get, or for that matter care at all for anything Benjamin wrote). As a complete book its pretty much a failure, rather loosely connected and requring a VERY high level of foreknowledge on philosphy, and specifically of religiously grounded philosphy, but individally some of its isolated parts are simply brilliant. There's enough in here for me to value, even if overall it was fairly exhausting.
2 stars is for overall book. Really its more like 2.5, but I think 3 is too much. As I say, hard to judge.