Challenging colonial discourse : Jewish studies and Protestant theology in Wilhelmine Germany /
On the basis of postcolonial theory, this study shows how Jewish scholars, in the controversies about the "essence" of Judaism and Christianity at the beginning of the 20th century, challenged the intellectual hegemony of Liberal Protestantism in Germany. By carefully examining the impact...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Alemán |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
2005.
|
Colección: | Studies in European Judaism ;
v. 10. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword by Susannah Heschel
- Preface
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE CONTEXT OF THE ENCOUNTERS AND CONTROVERSIES
- Chapter One: The Political and Social Situation of the Jewish Community in Wilhelmine Germany, 1890�1914
- 1. The Collapse of the Jewish Coalition with Liberalism and the Spread of Modern Anti-Semitism
- 2. The Remaining Limitations of the Emancipation of the Jews and Judaism
- 3. The Assimilation Crisis and Tendencies toward Recollecting Jewish Identity
- 3.1. Assimilation, Acculturation, and German-Jewish Subculture
- 3.2. Defense Work between Trotzjudentum and Jewish Renaissance3.3. Self-Emancipation � the Impulse of the Zionist Movement
- Chapter Two: The Self-Conception and Research Conditions of Jewish Studies
- 1. The Beginnings and Development of Jewish Studies in the Nineteenth Century
- 2. Profile and Scholarly Self-Understanding of the Educational Institutions of Jewish Studies
- 2.1. Positive-Historical Judaism � the Jewish Theological Seminary in Breslau
- 2.2. Liberal Judaism � The Lehranstalt f�r die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Berlin
- 2.3. Torah and Scholarship � The Orthodox Rabbinical Seminary of Berlin3. The Conditions of Jewish Studies' Encounter with Protestant Theology
- 3.1. Jewish Research between Discrimination and Claim to Relevance
- 3.2. Jewish Studies and Defense Work against Anti-Semitism
- PART TWO THE PERCEPTION OF PROTESTANT THEOLOGY
- Chapter Three: Jewish Studies and the Protestant Mission to the Jews, 1880�1914
- 1. The Jewish Perception of Protestant Allies in the Debate with Anti-Semitism, 1880�1890
- 1.1. The Contemporary Context: Demonization of Judaism through Anti-Talmud Propaganda and Accusations of Ritual Murder1.2. The Defense of Jewish Morality as Reflected in the Debate between David Hoffmann and Gustaf Dalman, 1886/1894
- 2. Love of Israel? � Jewish Refutation of Franz Delitzsch's Concept of the Mission to the Jews and the Limits of Christian Solidarity, 1880�1890
- 2.1. Delitzsch's Controversy with Abraham Berliner over the Instituta Judaica, 1884/85
- 2.2. The Debate of Jewish Scholars with Delitzsch's Ernste Fragen an die Gebildeten j�discher Religion, 1888/893. An Honest Friend of Judaism � The Significance of Hermann L. Strack from the Perspective of Jewish Studies
- 3.1. Herculean labor � Strack's Refutation of the Anti-Semitic Disparagement of the Jewish Religion
- 3.2. Appreciation of Strack's Scholarly Activity in the Area of Jewish Studies
- 4. We May Not Bite the Hand that Feeds Us � Interpretation of the Relationship between Jewish Studies and the Mission to the Jews