Fathers and Sons: Rethinking the Bar Mitzvah as an American Rite of Passage
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Abstract
The bar mitzvah draws popular as well as folkloristic attention because it is one of the few publicly recognized American rituals for entering adolescence. Popularly categorized as a Jewish folk tradition, the bar mitzvah is hardly a private affair; it is recognized, if not participated in, throughout the general population of North America as a result of being featured in popular films, television shows, and novels. Some of the notice for the bar mitzvah owes to depictions in the media of material excess. Additionally, the bar mitzvah raises a social psychological question of the relatively early coming of age at thirteen years old. The age is perceived as early in a modern American society characterized by an extended childhood and adolescence before adulthood. Elaborating on this critical coming-of-age issue, I propose that the folk sources of the bar mitzvah reveal a symbolism that suggests the ceremony acts to resolve father-son conflicts. Further, in the American context both non-Jews and Jews have heightened the ceremony’s importance because the event represents public displays of, or compensations for, uncertain masculine status.
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