Here's to Our Fraternity: One Hundred Years of Zeta Beta Tau, 1898-1998

Here's to Our Fraternity: One Hundred Years of Zeta Beta Tau, 1898-1998
ISBN-10
0874518792
ISBN-13
9780874518795
Category
Jewish college students
Pages
344
Language
English
Published
1998
Publisher
UPNE
Authors
Marianne Rachel Sanua, Marianne Sanua

Description

In the late 1800s an increasingly dominant fixture of student life on college campuses was the fraternity, groups of like-minded individuals who banded together based on "Greek" intellectual and social ideals. One such society was Zeta Beta Tau, founded by Dr. Richard James Horatio Gottheil and fourteen charter members at Columbia University in 1898 as a forum where young Jewish men could discuss their faith, enhance pride in their heritage, and embrace the ideals of the Zionist movement. In this study, Marianne Sanua follows the evolution of the fraternity from its rabbinic roots to its contemporary non-sectarianism and shows how ZBT's social opportunities, hitherto denied its members in the non-Jewish world, were a means of proving "first on the college campus and later to all the world that young Jewish men could be the equal of their best Gentile counterparts in achievement, behavior, and gentlemanly bearing". In chronicling ZBT, however, Sanua also examines broader issues like anti-Semitism, Zionism, assimilation, the presence of Jews in academe, and the changing goals and expectations of generations of the fraternity's members.

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