PODCAST: Jane Austen and Halakhic Morality

Yaffa Aranoff Tradition Online | October 26, 2025

December 16th will mark the 250th birthday of the renowned English novelist Jane Austen, and “Janeites” (as her fans call themselves) are aflutter worldwide. In this episode of the TRADITION Podcast Mali Brofsky chats with Yaffa Aranoff about her recent essay “The Perils of Gentle Selfishness: Jane Austen’s Emma and Halakhic Morality,” TRADITION 57:1 (Winter 2025).

Brofsky and Aranoff are both avid lovers of Austen’s writing, and in this conversation they discuss  how her novel Emma interacts with Aranoff’s reading of Hazal’s understanding of the principle to not “put a stumbling block before the blind,” revealing the depths of Austen’s wisdom and Hazal’s ethical sensitivity. The conversation concludes with a few words about Austen’s literary skill as it is conveyed through Mansfield Park, which was Brofsky’s pick for our 2025 Summer Book Endorsements.  They also consider Austen’s philosophy of virtue and the ways it is conveyed in her writing. Altogether, this episode serves as a demonstration of engagement with “the best” in literature, showing how it can redound to our growth as thinking religious beings.

Yaffa Aranoff teaches at Midreshet Lindenbaum’s Darcheynu program and at other institutions in Jerusalem. Mali Brofsky, a member of TRADITION’s editorial board, is a senior faculty member at MMY and a social worker in private practice.

Watch a video recording of this conversation.

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