Divine and Demonic in the Poetic Mythology of the Zohar: The "Other Side" of Kabbalah: IJS Studies in Judaica, cartea 18
Autor Nathaniel Bermanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 oct 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004386181
ISBN-10: 9004386181
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria IJS Studies in Judaica
ISBN-10: 9004386181
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria IJS Studies in Judaica
Cuprins
Prefatory Note
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Poetic Mythology for a Broken World
I Otherness and Brokenness
II A (Very Short) Kabbalistic Primer
III Overview of the Book
IV A Final Introductory Note
1 Demonic Writing: The Rhetoric and Ontology of Ambivalence
I Demonic Fascination, Zoharic Writing and Zohar Scholarship
II Texual Proliferation and Stylistic Audacity
III The Rhetoric and Ontology of Ambivalence
2 A Divided Cosmos
I Introduction: Ontological Splitting, Rhetorical Parallelism and Tropic Doubling
II Modeling the Other Side: Geography, Essence, Structure
III Reading the Other Side: Paradoxical Textuality
IV The Rhetorical Construction of Splitting I: the Seductions of Schemes
V The Rhetorical Construction of Splitting II: The Ambivalence of Tropes
3 The Formation of Self and Other through Abjection and Crystallization
I Introduction
II The Origin of the Demonic: Theological Concern and Mythic Narrative
III “Dualism,” “Duality,” and the Proto-Divine
IV From Catharsis to Abjection
V Ambivalences of Origins
VI Divine and Demonic: A Family Affair
VII Ambivalences of Intimacy
VIII Ambivalences of Sustenance: “Suckling”
IX Epilogue: A Theurgical Parallel
4 Impersonating the Self, Collapsing into the Abyss: The Convergence of Horror and Redemption
I Impersonation: Aggressive Enclothing and Ethopoeia
II The Abyss
Conclusion: The Divine/Dunghill, or, the Self is the Other
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Poetic Mythology for a Broken World
I Otherness and Brokenness
II A (Very Short) Kabbalistic Primer
III Overview of the Book
IV A Final Introductory Note
1 Demonic Writing: The Rhetoric and Ontology of Ambivalence
I Demonic Fascination, Zoharic Writing and Zohar Scholarship
II Texual Proliferation and Stylistic Audacity
III The Rhetoric and Ontology of Ambivalence
2 A Divided Cosmos
I Introduction: Ontological Splitting, Rhetorical Parallelism and Tropic Doubling
II Modeling the Other Side: Geography, Essence, Structure
III Reading the Other Side: Paradoxical Textuality
IV The Rhetorical Construction of Splitting I: the Seductions of Schemes
V The Rhetorical Construction of Splitting II: The Ambivalence of Tropes
3 The Formation of Self and Other through Abjection and Crystallization
I Introduction
II The Origin of the Demonic: Theological Concern and Mythic Narrative
III “Dualism,” “Duality,” and the Proto-Divine
IV From Catharsis to Abjection
V Ambivalences of Origins
VI Divine and Demonic: A Family Affair
VII Ambivalences of Intimacy
VIII Ambivalences of Sustenance: “Suckling”
IX Epilogue: A Theurgical Parallel
4 Impersonating the Self, Collapsing into the Abyss: The Convergence of Horror and Redemption
I Impersonation: Aggressive Enclothing and Ethopoeia
II The Abyss
Conclusion: The Divine/Dunghill, or, the Self is the Other
Bibliography
Notă biografică
Nathaniel Berman (JD, PhD) holds the Rahel Varnhagen Chair at Brown University, where he teaches in the Religious Studies Department. He has published extensively on law’s relationship to nationalism, colonialism and religion, as well as on Jewish mysticism.