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The idea that conservatism amounts to little more than being in
favour of free market capitalism and a small state-widely held for
decades-is seriously mistaken. Award-winning political theorist
Yoram Hazony argues that the best hope for Western democracy is to
return to a genuine conservatism that is distinct from the hollow
promises of contemporary economic and social liberalism. He
explains how this great Anglo-American conservative tradition -
rooted in empiricism, faith and the nation - emerged and developed
in England in the thought of men like Richard Hooker and Edmund
Burke, and later inspired American figures ranging from the
Federalists to Lincoln. He analyses how this tradition was
corrupted and subverted from the 1960s onwards by the right's
misconceived embrace of 'fusionism' and liberalism, and how it can
be revived today to respond to an era of progressive hegemony.
Reflecting on his own first-hand experiences - and the importance
of personal behaviour, piety and virtue in rebuilding the culture
and politics of conservatism - Hazony makes a powerful
counter-cultural case for a revivified conservatism that no-one
dissatisfied with the current state of the political right can
afford to miss.
What if the Hebrew Bible wasn't meant to be read as 'revelation'?
What if it's not really about miracles or the afterlife - but about
how to lead our lives in this world? The Philosophy of Hebrew
Scripture proposes a new framework for reading the Bible. It shows
how biblical authors used narrative and prophetic oratory to
advance universal arguments about ethics, political philosophy and
metaphysics. It offers bold new studies of biblical narratives and
prophetic poetry, transforming forever our understanding of what
the stories of Abel, Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, Moses and David and
the speeches of Isaiah and Jeremiah, were meant to teach. The
Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture assumes no belief in God or other
religious commitment. It assumes no previous background in Bible.
It is free of disciplinary jargon. Open the door to a book you
never knew existed. You'll never read the Bible the same way again.
A political crisis erupts when the Persian government falls to
fanatics, and a Jewish insider goes rogue, determined to save her
people at all costs. God and Politics in Esther explores politics
and faith. It is about an era in which the prophets have been
silenced and miracles have ceased, and Jewish politics has come to
depend not on commands from on high, but on the boldness and belief
of each woman and man. Esther takes radical action to win friends
and allies, reverse terrifying decrees, and bring God's justice
into the world with her own hands. Hazony's The Dawn has long been
a cult classic, read at Purim each year the world over. Twenty
years on, this revised edition brings the book to much wider
attention. Three controversial new chapters address the
astonishingly radical theology that emerges from amid the political
intrigues of the book.
What if the Hebrew Bible wasn't meant to be read as 'revelation'?
What if it's not really about miracles or the afterlife - but about
how to lead our lives in this world? The Philosophy of Hebrew
Scripture proposes a new framework for reading the Bible. It shows
how biblical authors used narrative and prophetic oratory to
advance universal arguments about ethics, political philosophy and
metaphysics. It offers bold new studies of biblical narratives and
prophetic poetry, transforming forever our understanding of what
the stories of Abel, Abraham, Jacob, Joseph, Moses and David and
the speeches of Isaiah and Jeremiah, were meant to teach. The
Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture assumes no belief in God or other
religious commitment. It assumes no previous background in Bible.
It is free of disciplinary jargon. Open the door to a book you
never knew existed. You'll never read the Bible the same way again.
In the wake of Brexit and the election of Donald Trump, countless
words have been written and uttered about nationalism-many accusing
nationalists of racism, hatred, and violence. But nationalism
wasn't always considered evil. Indeed, such venerated figures as
John Stuart Mill, Churchill, Eisenhower, and Ben-Gurion considered
themselves nationalists. Were the men and women of that era
misguided in their emphasis on self-determination for all peoples?
In The Virtue of Nationalism, the philosopher Yoram Hazony offers
an incisively original case for national sovereignty in an era when
it is under attack from many sides. He recounts how in the 17th and
18th centuries, English, Dutch, and American Protestants revived
the Old Testament's love of national independence, and how their
nationalism freed the world from the vision of universal empire
promoted by German-Catholic Holy Roman Emperors. Their vision
became the basis of opposition to imperialists of later eras, and
eventually brought freedom to peoples from Poland to India, and
from Israel to Ethiopia. But since the 1960s, the tide has turned
against national independence. "Globalists" say that
self-determination brought us two World Wars and the Holocaust. The
answer they offer us-global governance-is well-intentioned. Yet it
has reawakened hatreds, stoking chaos and revolt across the world.
Hazony argues that we will be forced to choose between a world of
independent states, or a renewal of universal empire-in the form of
the European Union or American hegemony. The Virtue of Nationalism
makes clear that anyone who values their freedoms should fight for
a world of nations.
A political crisis erupts when the Persian government falls to
fanatics, and a Jewish insider goes rogue, determined to save her
people at all costs. God and Politics in Esther explores politics
and faith. It is about an era in which the prophets have been
silenced and miracles have ceased, and Jewish politics has come to
depend not on commands from on high, but on the boldness and belief
of each woman and man. Esther takes radical action to win friends
and allies, reverse terrifying decrees, and bring God's justice
into the world with her own hands. Hazony's The Dawn has long been
a cult classic, read at Purim each year the world over. Twenty
years on, this revised edition brings the book to much wider
attention. Three controversial new chapters address the
astonishingly radical theology that emerges from amid the political
intrigues of the book.
This volume is a history of and a passionate call to defend Israels
mission as the state of the Jewish people. In what may be the most
controversial book on Zionism and Israel published since the 1980s,
Yoram Hazony graphically portrays the cultural and political revolt
against Israels status as the Jewish state. Examining ideological
trends in academia, literature, media, law, the armed forces, and
the foreign policy establishment, Hazony contends that Israelis are
preparing themselves for the final break with the Jewish past and
the Jewish future. In a dramatic new reading of Israeli history,
Hazony uncovers the story of how Martin Buber, Gershom Scholem,
Hannah Arendt, and other German-Jewish intellectuals bitterly
fought against the establishment of Israel, and later used the
Hebrew University as a base for deposing David Ben-Gurion and
discrediting Labor Zionism.
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