<p><span>The compelling vision of religious life and practice found in Hasidic sources has made it the most enduring and successful Jewish movement of spiritual renewal of all time. In this book, Ariel Evan Mayse grapples with one of Hasidism's most vexing questions: how did a religious movement kno
Studies In East European Jewish Mysticism And Hasidism
β Scribed by David I. Goldstein; David B. Goldstein
- Publisher
- Littman Library of Jewish Civilization in Association with Liverpool University Press
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 298
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Joseph Weiss (1918-69) showed a single-minded commitment to identifying and describing the mystical element in hasidism and to unravelling the spiritual and historical meaning of the hasidic movement. The studies collected here are still quoted in every serious study of hasidism. Joseph Dan's Introduction, written specially for this paperback edition, examines Weiss's scholarship both in the context of subsequent scholarly research and in the light of the resurgence of hasidism since the Second World War. He concludes that many of Weiss's detailed, perceptive, and empathetic studies are as relevant to understanding developments in the contemporary hasidic world as they are for understanding the emergence and growth of hasidism in the eighteenth century. 'A special strength of Weiss's scholarship is his ability to connect the specific to the general ...All this is achieved through a skilful and judicious reading of frequently tendentious and contentious Hasidic sources. This work will be of interest to historians of religion in general, and to students of the Jewish experience in Eastern Europe in particular.' John D.
Klier, Slavonic Review 'One can savour each essay on its own for its enduring qualities and perceptions regardless of the passing of time ...The scholarship is profound, the notes are extensive, but it is also open to all inquiring minds.' Albert H. Friedlander, European Judaism Joseph Weiss was Professor of Jewish Studies, University College London, from 1966 until his death in 1969. Joseph Dan is Emeritus Gershom Scholem Professor of Kabbalah at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Note on Sources
Note on Pronunciation
Introduction to the Paperback Edition Joseph Weiss Today
Editor's Introduction
Publisher's Note
Studies in East European Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism
Some Notes on the Social Background of Early Hasidism
A Circle of Pneumatics in Pre-Hasidism
Contemplative Mysticism and "Faith" in Hasidic Piety
Torah Study in Early Hasidism
The Kavvanoth of Prayer in Early Hasidism
Petitionary Prayer in Early Hasidism
Contemplation as Solitude
Contemplation as Self-Abandonment in the Writings of Hayyim Haika of Amdura
R. Abraham Kalisker's Concept of Communion with God and Men
The Authorship and Literary Unity of the Darkhei Yesharim
The SaddikβAltering the Divine Will
The Hasidic Way of Habad
Some Notes on Ecstasy in Habad Hasidism
A Late Jewish Utopia of Religious Freedom
Sense and Nonsense in Defining JudaismβThe Strange Case of Nahaman of Brazlav
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
When East European Jews migrated westward in ever larger numbers between 1870 and 1914, both German government officials and the leaders of German Jewry were confronted by a series of new challenges. What policies did government leaders devise to cope with the seemingly unending tide of Jews floodi
<span>When East European Jews migrated westward in ever larger numbers between 1870 and 1914, both German government officials and the leaders of German Jewry were confronted by a series of new challenges. What policies did government leaders devise to cope with the seemingly unending tide of Jews f
The blessings of morning -- Verses of song -- The Shema and its blessings -- The standing prayer -- The reading of Torah -- Supplication and obligation -- The Sabbath
Hasidism on the Margin explores one of the most provocative and radical traditions of Hasidic thought, the school of Izbica and Radzin that Rabbi Gershon Henokh originated in nineteenth-century Poland. Shaul Magid traces the intellectual history of this strand of Judaism from medieval Jewish philoso
This book describes a circle of Eastern European Kabbalists that established Hasidism, an important movement that has influenced Jewish Mysticism, Yiddish culture and Hebrew literature. It uncovers the messianic motivation, concealed in Hasidic writings after the failure of their 1740-1781 attempts