Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Satyr as Prophet: Notes on the “Jewish” Michelangelo
View through CrossRef
AbstractFocusing on the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the essay argues that there existed a Jewish fascination with the work of Michelangelo Buonarroti that was representative not only of a larger German and Jewish Italophilia at the time but also indicative of Jewish aesthetic concerns. Lodged between popular culture and the intellectual quest for an aesthetics that would problematize the figurative image and the classical sense of the beautiful, the Jewish reception of Michelangelo was guided by the themes of terribilita, unfinishedness, and the destruction of form. What emerges is a consistent dialectic of image and anti-image particularly in the writings of Salomon Ludwig Steinheim, Sigmund Freud, Hermann Cohen, Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, and Ernst Bloch. But what also emerges is that German Jewish intellectuals entertained a great, though often ambivalent, admiration for the Italian Renaissance and the culture of modern Italy.
Title: The Satyr as Prophet: Notes on the “Jewish” Michelangelo
Description:
AbstractFocusing on the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the essay argues that there existed a Jewish fascination with the work of Michelangelo Buonarroti that was representative not only of a larger German and Jewish Italophilia at the time but also indicative of Jewish aesthetic concerns.
Lodged between popular culture and the intellectual quest for an aesthetics that would problematize the figurative image and the classical sense of the beautiful, the Jewish reception of Michelangelo was guided by the themes of terribilita, unfinishedness, and the destruction of form.
What emerges is a consistent dialectic of image and anti-image particularly in the writings of Salomon Ludwig Steinheim, Sigmund Freud, Hermann Cohen, Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, and Ernst Bloch.
But what also emerges is that German Jewish intellectuals entertained a great, though often ambivalent, admiration for the Italian Renaissance and the culture of modern Italy.
Related Results
Michelangelo's Laurentian Library: Drawings and Design Process
Michelangelo's Laurentian Library: Drawings and Design Process
Re-examination of a key group of Michelangelo's sketches for the Laurentian Library, located in the monastic complex of Florence's S. Lorenzo, offers a new understanding of his des...
Den Judiska Kvinnoklubben (JKK) och de judiska flyktingarna under 1930- och 1940-talen
Den Judiska Kvinnoklubben (JKK) och de judiska flyktingarna under 1930- och 1940-talen
In a Swedish context, Jewish women’s experiences and actions have gone unrecorded and unrecognised; most narratives of Swedish Jewish history offer only...
Between Suspicion and Censure: Attitudes towards
the Jewish Left in Postwar Vancouver
Between Suspicion and Censure: Attitudes towards
the Jewish Left in Postwar Vancouver
This article examines relations between the Vancouver Peretz
Institute (VPI, a secular, Yiddish-based organization), the
United Jewish People’s Order (UJPO, a political group with
...
David Ben-Gurion
David Ben-Gurion
David Ben-Gurion (b. 1886–d. 1973) was probably the most important figure in the history of modern Israel, if only for the fact that he proclaimed the independence of Israel on 14 ...
A Project by Michelangelo for the Ambo(s) of Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
A Project by Michelangelo for the Ambo(s) of Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
A group of Michelangelo's architectural drawings preserved in the Ashmolean and in the British Museum contains several detailed studies for a tall, semi-octagonal structure. Wherea...
Michelangelo as a Baroque Poet
Michelangelo as a Baroque Poet
Michelangelo Buonarroti's influence upon baroque sculpture is now widely recognised by historians. Ever since that morning in 1506 when he and the Sangalli, father and son, watched...
SEMANTICS STUDY OF THE WORD 'MUSLIM' IN AL-QURAN
SEMANTICS STUDY OF THE WORD 'MUSLIM' IN AL-QURAN
Purpose: This research will try to research the semantic meaning of Muslims in Al-Qur'an. What is the meaning of the Muslim in Al-Qur'an? How many verses contain the word Muslim in...
The Role of Letters in Biographies of Michelangelo*
The Role of Letters in Biographies of Michelangelo*
Abstract
This study examines the role that Michelangelo’s letters have played
in biographies of the artist. It focuses on two...