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Marked in Your Flesh

Marked in Your Flesh

by Leonard B. Glick

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"Leonard B. Glick traces the history of infant circumcision from its origins in ancient Judea, through centuries of Christian condemnation and Jewish defense, to its current role in American culture and medical practice. A chapter of the book of Genesis, composed by priests around 500 B.C.E., says that God made a covenant with Abraham, promising him a glorious posterity on condition that he and all his male descendants be circumcised. Eventually the practice of infant male circumcision would become a key element in the separation between Judaism and Christianity. While Christians rejected circumcision as spiritually irrelevant, Jews held unwaveringly to the belief that being a Jewish male meant being physically circumcised." "Informed medical opinion is still divided, but most physicians now agree that circumcision confers no significant medical benefits; yet the practice is still routine in most American hospitals. At the same time, determined opposition has grown among those who recognize its significant adverse effects and the ethical and legal implications of imposing reductive surgery on the genitals of nonconsenting persons. Moreover, Jewish opponents maintain that this disfiguring practice makes no positive contribution to modern Jewish American life."--Jacket.
Categories:
["Circumcision" "Jewish physicians" "Medicine" "Judaism" "History" "Relations" "Christianity" "Judentum" "Beschneidung" "Geschichte" "Judaism history medieval and early modern period 425-1789" "Circumcision religious aspects" "Medicine history" "Male Circumcision" "15.59 history of great parts of the world peoples civilizations: other" "Interfaith relations" "Medieval and early modern period" "Alltagskultur" "Christentum" "Juden" "Kontroverse" "Medizinische Ethik" "Circumcisie" "Religious aspects"]

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