Simon Dubnow's "New Judaism" : Diaspora Nationalism and the World History of the Jews.
In Simon Dubnow's 'New Judaism', Seltzer traces a shtetl youth's rejection of traditional Judaism and the impact of European intellectual currents on the most eminent East European Jewish historian of his time (1860-1941) and exponent of Jewish cultural nationalism.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Brill,
2013.
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Colección: | Supplements to The journal of Jewish thought and philosophy.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface; Note; Part One Breaking with the Past, 1860-1886; Chapter One Leaving the Shtetl; Russian Jewry in the Reign of Alexander II; Dubnow's "First World"; The Vilna Haskalah and the Beginning of Simon's Rebellion; Chapter Two From Haskalah to Positivism; The Search for a Secular Education; The Impact of Radical Maskilim, Russian Nihilists, and their Western Exemplars; Dubnow's Self-Image in his Early Twenties; Chapter Three Young Dubnow as a Jewish Positivist; The Jewish Press in Nineteenth-century Russia; The Budding Career of a Russian-Jewish Critic.
- Kritikus/Externus on the Backwardness of Russian JewryPart Two Reconsidering the Past, 1886-1897; Chapter Four Coping with New Realities; Rejection; In and Out of an Emotional Crisis; Discovering History; Chapter Five Romantic Positivism; The Influence of Renan and Graetz; The Influence of Lavrov and Mikhailovsky; Historical Integratsia Dushi; Part Three The Exigencies of the Present, 1897-1907; Chapter Six The Historian Becomes a Nationalist; Activism; The Odessa Circle; Autonomism; Chapter Seven From the Nineteenth to the Twentieth Century; The Letters on Old and New Judaism.
- On Dubnow's HistoriographyFrom Vilna to St. Petersburg/Petrograd to Berlin to Riga; Chapter Eight Reconsiderations; Are the Jews a Nation?; Defensive Nationalism; Dubnow, Then and Now; Bibliography; Auto Bibliography Simon Dubnow; Index.