UID:
edocfu_9960143978702883
Format:
1 online resource (403 pages).
Series Statement:
Studies in Jewish history and memory ; Volume 12
Content:
Edmond Jabès was one of the most intriguing Jewish thinkers of the 20th century--a poet for the public and a Kabbalist for those who read his work more closely. This book turns his writings into a ground-breaking philosophical achievement: thinking which is manifestly indebted to the Kabbalah, but in the post-religious and post-Shoah world. Loss, exile, negativity, God's absence, writing and Jewishness are the main signposts of the negative ontology which this book offers as an interpretation of Jabès' work. On the basis of it, the book enquiries into the nature of the miraculous encounter between Judaism and philosophy which occurred in the 20th century. Modernity means that philosophical Judaism is necessarily a re-constructed tradition: not a source, but a field played with by modern forces.
Note:
Jewish philosophy of modernity -- Edmond Jabes: life and writing -- Tzimtzum: Jabes and Luria -- Negative ontology: the vocable; god, nothing and the name -- Messianism of writing -- The concept of the book -- Judaism and writing -- The shoah and anti--semitism -- Jabes' ethics: repetition, resemblance and hospitality -- Theology of the point: Jabes as a modern Kabbalist.
Additional Edition:
ISBN 3-631-67523-2
Language:
English