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Focuses on a range of Jewish and non-Jewish writers to examine the
intersection of Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, and
secular Jewish literatures. Kabbalah and Literature shows how the
Jewish mystical tradition contributes to the renewal of literature
in a modern, global, and increasingly disconnected age. Kitty
Millet explores Kabbalah’s conceptual underpinnings, aesthetic
principles, tenets, and signifiers to demonstrate how
literature’s absorption of kabbalistic material has altered its
ontology, function, and the tasks it sets for itself. Reading
writers from Europe and the Americas, Kitty Millet maps how the
kabbalist’s desire to "recover Eden" transforms into a latent
messianic drive only intuitable through text. Thus it charts a
journey of sorts, a migration of Jewish mystical material embedded
surreptitiously within text in order to shift ever so slightly at
times the range of the literary to encompass an aesthetic vision
not easily reducible to the literal, the known, the allegorical, or
even the philosophical. In this way, Kabbalah and Literature
proposes a novel, intuitive approach, shifting focus away from the
Jewish text’s epistemological elements to embrace its "secrets."
On Jean Amery provides a comprehensive discussion of one of the
most challenging and complex post-Holocaust thinkers, Jean Amery
(1912-1978), a Jewish-Austrian-Belgian essayist, journalist and
literary author. In the English-speaking world Amery is known for
his poignant publication, At the Mind's Limits, a narrative of
exile, dispossession, torture, and Auschwitz. In recent years,
there has been a renewed interest in Amery's writings on
victimization and resentment, partly attributable to a modern
fascination with tolerance, historical injustice, and
reconciliatory ambitions. Many aspects of Amery's writing have
remained largely unexplored outside the realm of European
scholarship, and his legacy in English-language scholarship limited
to discussions of victimization and memory. This volume offers the
first English language collection of academic essays on the
post-Holocaust thought of Jean Amery. Comprehensive in scope and
multi-disciplinary in orientation, contributors explore central
aspects of Amery's philosophical and ethical position, including
dignity, responsibility, resentment, and forgiveness. What emerges
from the pages of this book is an image of Amery as a difficult and
perplexing-yet exceptionally engaging-thinker, whose writings
address some of the central paradoxes of survivorship and
witnessing. The intellectual and ethical questions of Amery's
philosophies are equally pertinent today as they were half-century
ago: How one can reconcile with the irreconcilable? How can one
account for the unaccountable? And, how can one live after
catastrophe?
This state of the art collection offers fresh perspectives on why
intersections between literature, religion, and ethics can address
the fault lines of modernity and are not necessarily the cause of
modernity's 'faults.' From a diverse cohort of scholars from around
the world, with appointments in comparative literature and other
disciplines, the essays suggest that the imagined hegemony of a
Judeo-Christian Western project is neither exclusively true nor
productive. However, the essays also suggest that elements of the
Western religious traditions are important vectors for
understanding modernity's complicated relationship to the past.
This book provides a sophisticated investigation into the
experience of being exterminated, as felt by victims of the
Holocaust, and compares and contrasts this analysis with the
experiences of people who have been colonized or enslaved. Using
numerous victim accounts and a wide range of primary sources, the
book moves away from the 'continuity thesis', with its insistence
on colonial intent as the reason for victimization in relation to
other historical examples of mass political violence, to look at
the victim experience on its own terms. By affording each
constituent case study its own distinctive aspects, The Victims of
Slavery, Colonization and the Holocaust allows for a more enriching
comparison of victim experience to be made that respects each group
of victims in their uniqueness. It is an important, innovative
volume for all students of the Holocaust, genocide and the history
of mass political violence.
This book provides a sophisticated investigation into the
experience of being exterminated, as felt by victims of the
Holocaust, and compares and contrasts this analysis with the
experiences of people who have been colonized or enslaved. Using
numerous victim accounts and a wide range of primary sources, the
book moves away from the 'continuity thesis', with its insistence
on colonial intent as the reason for victimization in relation to
other historical examples of mass political violence, to look at
the victim experience on its own terms. By affording each
constituent case study its own distinctive aspects, The Victims of
Slavery, Colonization and the Holocaust allows for a more enriching
comparison of victim experience to be made that respects each group
of victims in their uniqueness. It is an important, innovative
volume for all students of the Holocaust, genocide and the history
of mass political violence.
This state of the art collection offers fresh perspectives on why
intersections between literature, religion, and ethics can address
the fault lines of modernity and are not necessarily the cause of
modernity's 'faults.' From a diverse cohort of scholars from around
the world, with appointments in comparative literature and other
disciplines, the essays suggest that the imagined hegemony of a
Judeo-Christian Western project is neither exclusively true nor
productive. However, the essays also suggest that elements of the
Western religious traditions are important vectors for
understanding modernity's complicated relationship to the past.
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