Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Gershom Scholem and Christian Kabbalah

View through CrossRef
Abstract This paper tries to shed light on the value and limitations of the label ‘Christian Kabbalah’ for our knowledge of the historical phenomenon it describes. It works out how Christian scholars approached Kabbalah for a variety of reasons, be they instrumental, polemicizing or glorifying approaches, or for further motives. In addition, the article examines how the basic lines of the field of research around the Kabbalah in general were established and which impulses emanated from Gershom Scholem in particular. It concludes with an examination of Scholem’s religious philosophy with regard to his own research interest in the Kabbalah, which goes, in Scholem’s words, beyond historiography in some cases. Scholem described academic research on Kabbalah as ‘ironic’ and this irony affects his own ambivalent attitude towards the Christian Kabbalists of the Renaissance and the early modern epoch.
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Title: Gershom Scholem and Christian Kabbalah
Description:
Abstract This paper tries to shed light on the value and limitations of the label ‘Christian Kabbalah’ for our knowledge of the historical phenomenon it describes.
It works out how Christian scholars approached Kabbalah for a variety of reasons, be they instrumental, polemicizing or glorifying approaches, or for further motives.
In addition, the article examines how the basic lines of the field of research around the Kabbalah in general were established and which impulses emanated from Gershom Scholem in particular.
It concludes with an examination of Scholem’s religious philosophy with regard to his own research interest in the Kabbalah, which goes, in Scholem’s words, beyond historiography in some cases.
Scholem described academic research on Kabbalah as ‘ironic’ and this irony affects his own ambivalent attitude towards the Christian Kabbalists of the Renaissance and the early modern epoch.

Related Results

The Kabbalistic Trees of Gershom Scholem
The Kabbalistic Trees of Gershom Scholem
Scholars have only recently begun to take interest in ilanot (kabbalistic trees), a genre of kabbalistic creativity ignored by Gershom Scholem, the preeminent scholar of Jewish mys...
The Star of David and the Stars Outside: The Poetics and Semiotics of Jewish Folklore and of Zionism
The Star of David and the Stars Outside: The Poetics and Semiotics of Jewish Folklore and of Zionism
“The Star of David and the Stars Outside: The Poetics and Semiotics of Jewish Folklore and of Zionism” written in memory of Dov Noy by his disciple and successor, proposes the pers...
Review Essays
Review Essays
Book reviewed in this article:SORTING OUT THE RELATIONSHIPS AMONG CHRISTIAN VALUES, US POPULAR RELIGION, AND HOLLYWOOD FILMS: SCREENING THE SACRED: RELIGION, MYTH AND IDEOLOGY IN P...
Qur’an Versus Kabbalah: A Reading into Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
Qur’an Versus Kabbalah: A Reading into Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
Abstract This paper examines the historical development of Messianic Kabbalah and its impact on the Palestinian–Israeli conflict. It argues that the concept of redemption (tikkun),...
Introduction
Introduction
This introductory chapter provides an overview of Kabbalah. A Hebrew term one can render as “tradition” or “reception.” Kabbalah referred to a mode of reading, a library of texts, ...
Coda
Coda
This coda details how Jacob Sasportas, as well as his three most intensive readers—Jacob Emden, Gershom Scholem, and Joel Teitelbaum—all perceived their worlds to be in crisis. For...
Zion
Zion
This chapter focuses on Gershom Scholem and Joel Teitelbaum as readers of Jacob Sasportas. Both Scholem and Teitelbaum considered the middle of the twentieth century as a period of...
Prisca Theologia and Retrograde Phenomenology at Eranos : Corbin, Eliade, not Scholem
Prisca Theologia and Retrograde Phenomenology at Eranos : Corbin, Eliade, not Scholem
The article proposes a re-evaluation of the Eranos meetings by analyzing its underlying aspects as a «laboratory of spiritual scholarship». To this aim, the first half of the artic...

Back to Top