
Haredi adventure stories are a curious but popular genre. There is the 2005 Yiddish-language film A gesheft ("A Deal"), the story of a Hasid-gone-bad out for revenge on the pious man he wrongly blames for his childhood misfortunes.
Haredi Films Rachel Leket-Mor, Association of Jewish Libraries. The current demand for appropriate entertaining titles in the Haredi community in Israel is reflected, among other things, in the growing movie industry led by Haredi producers and directors. (Audio) SAVE
Beneath Black Hats Eitan Kensky, Forward. With some noteworthy results, American movies and television are beginning to present Hasidim not as caricatures but as actual individuals; still, there's a long way to go. SAVE
A Voice of One's Own D.G. Myers, Literary Commentary. What makes American Jewish novelists different from other American novelists—and almost instantly recognizable as Jewish? SAVE
Lives of the Ex-Haredim Joshua Halberstam, Jewish Ideas Daily. The men and women who leave their ultra-Orthodox communities usually leave the Jewish world entirely. As a result, that world is losing a resource that it can hardly afford to squander. SAVE
The Great Orthodox Comeback Lawrence Grossman, Jewish Ideas Daily. The resurgence of Orthodoxy is one of the most surprising transformations of Judaism in the past 60 years. Is one single man responsible? SAVE
SAVE "Kosher Fiction"