Jewish Thought, Utopia, and Revolution

Jewish Thought, Utopia, and Revolution
Title Jewish Thought, Utopia, and Revolution PDF eBook
Author Elena Namli
Publisher Rodopi
Pages 215
Release 2014-05-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9401210780

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In response to the grim realities of the present world Jewish thought has not tended to retreat into eschatological fantasy, but rather to project utopian visions precisely on to the present moment, envisioning redemptions that are concrete, immanent, and necessarily political in nature. In difficult times and through shifting historical contexts, the messianic hope in the Jewish tradition has functioned as a political vision: the dream of a peaceful kingdom, of a country to return to, or of a leader who will administer justice among the nations. Against this background, it is unsurprising that Jewish messianism in modern times has been transposed, and lives on in secular political movements and ideologies. The purpose of this book is to contribute to the deeper understanding of the relationship between Jewish thought, utopia, and revolution, by taking a fresh look at its historical and religious roots. We approach the issue from several perspectives, with differences of opinion presented both in regard to what Jewish tradition is, and how to regard utopia and revolution. These notions are multifaceted, comprising aspects such as political messianism, religious renewal, Zionism, and different forms of Marxist and Anarchistic movements.

Redemption and Utopia

Redemption and Utopia
Title Redemption and Utopia PDF eBook
Author Michael Lowy
Publisher Verso Books
Pages 289
Release 2017-03-28
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1786630877

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Classic study of Jewish libertarian thought, from Walter Benjamin to Franz Kafka Towards the end of the nineteenth century, there appeared in Central Europe a generation of Jewish intellectuals whose work was to transform modern culture. Drawing at once on the traditions of German Romanticism and Jewish messianism, their thought was organized around the cabalistic idea of the “tikkoun”: redemption. Redemption and Utopia uses the concept of “elective affinity” to explain the surprising community of spirit that existed between redemptive messianic religious thought and the wide variety of radical secular utopian beliefs held by this important group of intellectuals. The author outlines the circumstances that produced this unusual combination of religious and non-religious thought and illuminates the common assumptions that united such seemingly disparate figures as Martin Buber, Franz Kafka, Walter Benjamin and Georg Lukács.

Moses Dobruska and the Invention of Social Philosophy

Moses Dobruska and the Invention of Social Philosophy
Title Moses Dobruska and the Invention of Social Philosophy PDF eBook
Author Silvana Greco
Publisher Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Pages 236
Release 2022-01-19
Genre History
ISBN 3110758822

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This book proposes, for the first time, an in-depth analysis of the Philosophie sociale, published in Paris in 1793 by Moses Dobruska (1753-1794). Dobruska was a businessman, scholar, and social philosopher, born into a Jewish family in Moravia, who converted to Catholicism, gained wide recognition at the Habsburg court in Vienna, and then emigrated to France to join the French Revolution. Dobruska, who took on the name Junius Frey during his Parisian sojourn, barely survived his book. Accused of conspiring on behalf of foreign powers, he was guillotined on April 5, 1794, at the height of The Terror, on the same day as Georges Jacques Danton. From Dobruska's ideas, which were widely used between the late eighteenth century and the first decades of the nineteenth century without attribution to their author, emerge some of the key concepts of the social sciences as we know them today. An enthusiastic and unfortunate revolutionary and sometimes a brilliant theorist, Moses Dobruska deserves a role of his own in the history of sociology.

Roads to Utopia

Roads to Utopia
Title Roads to Utopia PDF eBook
Author David Greenstein
Publisher Stanford University Press
Pages 325
Release 2014-02-12
Genre Religion
ISBN 0804789681

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As the greatest book of Jewish mysticism, the Zohar is a revered and much-studied work. Yet, surprisingly, scholarship on the Zohar has yet to pay attention to its most unique literary device—the presentation of its insights while its teachers walk on the road. In these pages, rabbi and scholar David Greenstein offers the first examination of the "walking on the road" motif. Greenstein's original approach hones in on how this motif expresses the struggles with spatiality and the everyday presented in the Zohar. He argues that the walking theme is not a metaphor for realms to be collapsed into or transcended by the holy, as conventional interpretations would have it. Rather, it conveys us into those quotidian spaces that are obdurately present alongside the realm of the sacred. By embracing the reality of mundane existence, and recognizing the prosaic dimensions of the worldly path, the Zohar is an especially exceptional mystical treatise. In this volume, Greenstein makes visible a singular, though previously unstudied, achievement of the Zohar.

Divining History

Divining History
Title Divining History PDF eBook
Author Jayne Svenungsson
Publisher Berghahn Books
Pages 240
Release 2016-08-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 1785331744

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For millennia, messianic visions of redemption have inspired men and women to turn against unjust and oppressive orders. Yet these very same traditions are regularly decried as antecedents to the violent and authoritarian ideologies of modernity. Informed in equal parts by theology and historical theory, this book offers a provocative exploration of this double-edged legacy. Author Jayne Svenungsson rigorously pursues a middle path between utopian arrogance and an enervated postmodernism, assessing the impact of Jewish and Christian theologies of history on subsequent thinkers, and in the process identifying a web of spiritual and intellectual motifs extending from ancient Jewish prophets to contemporary radicals such as Giorgio Agamben and Slavoj Zizek.

History and utopia : Central European Jewish thought in the works of Joseph Roth and György Konrád

History and utopia : Central European Jewish thought in the works of Joseph Roth and György Konrád
Title History and utopia : Central European Jewish thought in the works of Joseph Roth and György Konrád PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 361
Release 2006
Genre
ISBN

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The present dissertation analyzes the fusion between utopia and history accomplished in the literary and essayistic works of two prominent 20 th century Central European writers: Joseph Roth and Gyorgy Konrad. It proceeds by way of examining the secular Judaic origins of their thinking and indicates their indebtedness to a generation of Jewish thinkers, such as Martin Buber, Ernst Bloch and Walter Benjamin, who first laid the foundation for a moral unification between the social conception of historical existence and the messianic idea of redemption. The conclusions of the present study indicate that Joseph Roth's fictionalization of the Eastern Jewish world and of imperial Austria, as well as Gyorgy Konrad's political theory and idealization of Central Europe are inseparable from the ethos of secular Jewish utopianism, to which they give a renewed expression. Their moral conception of the world and the notion of universal humanity convey in fictional terms the literary counterpart to a theory which appropriates the Judaic messianic doctrine in order to provide a utopian solution to the insoluble conflict between the persistence of history and the religious imperative of salvation. The investigation of this particular conceptual and thematic connection was carried out with the means of comparative intellectual history, which analyzed both the synchronic relatedness among similar theoretical problems and the diachronic influence and reciprocal impact of certain ideas on their own historical time and context. The primary sources cover an extensive portion of the work of the two main subjects of investigation, Joseph Roth and Gyorgy Konrad, while the secondary sources offer an ample review of the main literature dedicated to the two authors both in English and in German.

Origins of the Kabbalah

Origins of the Kabbalah
Title Origins of the Kabbalah PDF eBook
Author Gershom Gerhard Scholem
Publisher Princeton University Press
Pages 511
Release 2019-02-26
Genre Religion
ISBN 0691184305

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With the publication of The Origins of the Kabbalah in 1950, one of the most important scholars of our century brought the obscure world of Jewish mysticism to a wider audience for the first time. A crucial work in the oeuvre of Gershom Scholem, this book details the beginnings of the Kabbalah in twelfth- and thirteenth-century southern France and Spain, showing its rich tradition of repeated attempts to achieve and portray direct experiences of God. The Origins of the Kabbalah is a contribution not only to the history of Jewish medieval mysticism, but also to the study of medieval mysticism in general. Now with a new foreword by David Biale, this book remains essential reading for students of the history of religion.