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“Gibel Azoulay’s work does broaden the discussion of American interracial identity in general, and Black and Jewish and interracial identities in particular. Gibel Azoulay enlarges the boundaries of geography, literature, and ideas. Her prescriptions for ways to think about—and live—interracial identities deserve contemplation. Black, Jewish, and Interracial is a brave book, a courageous book with unusual structure and contents.”
P. L. Sunderland, Anthropology Quarterly
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“[P]rovides a broad historical, sociological and psychological perspective, without sacrificing the immediacy of the authors own experience of interfaith interraciality or that of the various individuals whose testimony comprises the evidentiary base of her study.”
Emily Miller Budick, Studies in Contemporary Jewry
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