Secularizing the Sacred: Aspects of Israeli Visual Culture: Brill's Series in Jewish Studies, cartea 65
Autor Alec Mishoryen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 aug 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004405264
ISBN-10: 9004405267
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Series in Jewish Studies
ISBN-10: 9004405267
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Series in Jewish Studies
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Note on Terms and Transliteration
Introduction
1 The Clarion Call: E. M. Lilien and the Jewish Renaissance
1.1 Life, Heroism, and Beauty
1.2 Lilien’s Winged Figures
1.3 Restrained Decadence: Jewish Angels
1.4 Olympus and Golgotha in the Service of Zionism
2 Boris Schatz’s Pantheon of Zionist Cultural Heroes
2.1 A Day Dream
2.2 A New Florence
2.3 A Hebrew Pantheon: Individual Commemoration
2.4 Collective Commemoration
2.5 Schatz’s Legacy: Models for a Sovereign State Heroes
3 “The Garden of Love”: Early Zionist Eroticism
3.1 The Garden of Love: A Remedial Institution for Nervous Atrophy
3.2 In the Song of Songs Pavilion
3.3 The New Jew: Intellect and Sensuality Combined
3.4 Kisses and Embraces
3.5 Orientalism and Symbolism in the Zionist-Biblical World
3.6 The Secular Bride
4 Zionist Revival and Rebirth on the Façade of the Municipal School in Tel Aviv
4.1 Past and Present Come Together
4.2 Four Hebrew Cities
5 Israel’s Scroll of Independence
6 Hues of Heaven: The Israeli Flag
6.1 The Zionist Flag
6.2 The Magen David (David’s Shield) or the Jewish Star
6.3 The Blue Stripes
6.4 First Proposals for an Israeli Flag
6.5 A Multitude of King David’s Shields
7 Menorah and Olive Branches on Israel’s National Emblem
7.1 In Search of a National Emblem
7.2 Archaeology and Socialism: Jewish Tradition versus Secularism
7.3 The Shamir Brothers Studio’s Proposal
7.4 Prophet Zecharia’s Vision: Harmony between State and Church
7.5 A Visual Precedent from 1300
7.6 Public Reactions to the Design of the National Emblem
8 From Exile to Homeland: the Mythical Journey of the Temple Menorah
8.1 An Icon of Destruction
8.2 The Arch of Titus: A Symbol of Destruction and Exile
8.3 “Oh Titus, Titus, If You Could Only See!”
8.4 The Menorah Returns Home
8.5 A Miraculous Translocation
8.6 A Gift from the Mother of Parliaments to the New Israeli Parliament
8.7 Benno Elkan: A Self-Anointed Modern Bezalel
8.8 The Menorah’s Penultimate Station on Its Way Home: Kssalon Settlement
8.9 Visual References to the Israeli Menorah Motif
9 Zionism Liberates the Captured Daughter of Zion
9.1 The Judaea capta Coin
9.2 Jewish References to the Roman Judaea capta Coin
9.3 From Judaea capta to Judaea liberata
9.4 The Judaea capta Image on Official Israeli Publications
9.5 A Late Israeli Daughter of Zion
10 The Twelve Tribes of Israel: From Biblical Symbolism to Emblems of a Mythical Promised Land
10.1 The Twelve Tribes of Israel: Symbolizing the Unity and Diversity of the Jewish People
10.2 Biblical and Midrashim Sources
10.3 Verbal Turned Visual: Heraldic Emblems of the Twelve Tribes
10.4 From Christian Bibles to Jewish Synagogue Decorations
10.5 E. M. Lilien’s Legacy
10.6 Beyond Lilien’s Legacy
10.7 Symbols of Sovereignty
10.8 Emblems of a Mythical Promised Land
11 Old and New in Land of Israel Flora
11.1 Israeli Plants as Local Icons
11.2 Familiar Biblical Plants: The Seven Kinds
11.3 The Four Species
11.4 Grapes, Figs, and Pomegranates as Symbols of Sovereignty
11.5 The Spies Motif
11.6 The New Jew as a Tiller of the Soil
11.7 Herzl’s Cypress Tree Myth
11.8 Unfamiliar Wild Plants
11.9 “A Very Lovely Cyclamen”
11.10 “We Shall Return as Red Flowers”
11.11 “Nobody Understands Cyclamens Anymore”
11.12 Local Plants Revisited
11.13 A Symbol Shared by Two Peoples: The Israeli Cactus
12 Ancient Magic and Modern Transformation: The Unique Hebrew Alphabet
12.1 Hebrew Calligraphy
12.2 Hebrew Typography
12.3 Hebrew Typography in Israeli Design
12.4 Uses of the Hebrew Alphabet in Non-textual Israeli Visual Media
13 From Pilgrimage Site to Military Marching Grounds: Theodor Herzl’s Gravesite in Jerusalem
13.1 Herzl’s Coffin Brought to Tel Aviv
13.2 Herzl’s Burial Ceremony in Jerusalem
13.3 International Competition for Herzl’s Burial Site Design
13.4 Winner of the Competition: Yosef Klarwein’s Design
13.5 Runner-up Prize: Danziger and Shalgi’s Design
13.6 The Committee for Herzl’s Burial Site Doubts Its Own Decisions
13.7 Herzl’s Tomb Final Design and Unveiling
14 Natan Rapoport’s Soviet Style of the Yad Mordechai and Negba Memorials
14.1 Ghetto Heroism and Israeli Valor
14.2 The Yad Mordechai Memorial
14.3 The Negba Memorial
15 Holocaust and Resurrection in Yigal Tumarkin’s Memorial in Tel Aviv
15.1 Is It Possible to Render the Holocaust Visually?
15.2 The International Committee, Auschwitz
15.3 Israeli Holocaust Memorials at Yad Vashem
15.4 The Memorial to the Holocaust and the Resurrection of Israel
16 In Conclusion: Secularizing the Sacred, Israeli Art, and Jewish Orthodox Laws
16.1 The Hebrew Bible: A Spring Abundant with Narratives and Allegorical Figures
16.2 A Visual Discourse with Jewish Artists from the Past
16.3 Israeli “Graven Images”
16.4 Hybrids
16.5 Jewish Angels and Israeli Cherubs
16.6 Taharah and tum’ah (Purity and Impurity)
General Index
Note on Terms and Transliteration
Introduction
Part 1: Before Statehood
1 The Clarion Call: E. M. Lilien and the Jewish Renaissance
1.1 Life, Heroism, and Beauty
1.2 Lilien’s Winged Figures
1.3 Restrained Decadence: Jewish Angels
1.4 Olympus and Golgotha in the Service of Zionism
2 Boris Schatz’s Pantheon of Zionist Cultural Heroes
2.1 A Day Dream
2.2 A New Florence
2.3 A Hebrew Pantheon: Individual Commemoration
2.4 Collective Commemoration
2.5 Schatz’s Legacy: Models for a Sovereign State Heroes
3 “The Garden of Love”: Early Zionist Eroticism
3.1 The Garden of Love: A Remedial Institution for Nervous Atrophy
3.2 In the Song of Songs Pavilion
3.3 The New Jew: Intellect and Sensuality Combined
3.4 Kisses and Embraces
3.5 Orientalism and Symbolism in the Zionist-Biblical World
3.6 The Secular Bride
4 Zionist Revival and Rebirth on the Façade of the Municipal School in Tel Aviv
4.1 Past and Present Come Together
4.2 Four Hebrew Cities
Part 2: Objects and Conceptions of Sovereignty
5 Israel’s Scroll of Independence
6 Hues of Heaven: The Israeli Flag
6.1 The Zionist Flag
6.2 The Magen David (David’s Shield) or the Jewish Star
6.3 The Blue Stripes
6.4 First Proposals for an Israeli Flag
6.5 A Multitude of King David’s Shields
7 Menorah and Olive Branches on Israel’s National Emblem
7.1 In Search of a National Emblem
7.2 Archaeology and Socialism: Jewish Tradition versus Secularism
7.3 The Shamir Brothers Studio’s Proposal
7.4 Prophet Zecharia’s Vision: Harmony between State and Church
7.5 A Visual Precedent from 1300
7.6 Public Reactions to the Design of the National Emblem
8 From Exile to Homeland: the Mythical Journey of the Temple Menorah
8.1 An Icon of Destruction
8.2 The Arch of Titus: A Symbol of Destruction and Exile
8.3 “Oh Titus, Titus, If You Could Only See!”
8.4 The Menorah Returns Home
8.5 A Miraculous Translocation
8.6 A Gift from the Mother of Parliaments to the New Israeli Parliament
8.7 Benno Elkan: A Self-Anointed Modern Bezalel
8.8 The Menorah’s Penultimate Station on Its Way Home: Kssalon Settlement
8.9 Visual References to the Israeli Menorah Motif
9 Zionism Liberates the Captured Daughter of Zion
9.1 The Judaea capta Coin
9.2 Jewish References to the Roman Judaea capta Coin
9.3 From Judaea capta to Judaea liberata
9.4 The Judaea capta Image on Official Israeli Publications
9.5 A Late Israeli Daughter of Zion
10 The Twelve Tribes of Israel: From Biblical Symbolism to Emblems of a Mythical Promised Land
10.1 The Twelve Tribes of Israel: Symbolizing the Unity and Diversity of the Jewish People
10.2 Biblical and Midrashim Sources
10.3 Verbal Turned Visual: Heraldic Emblems of the Twelve Tribes
10.4 From Christian Bibles to Jewish Synagogue Decorations
10.5 E. M. Lilien’s Legacy
10.6 Beyond Lilien’s Legacy
10.7 Symbols of Sovereignty
10.8 Emblems of a Mythical Promised Land
11 Old and New in Land of Israel Flora
11.1 Israeli Plants as Local Icons
11.2 Familiar Biblical Plants: The Seven Kinds
11.3 The Four Species
11.4 Grapes, Figs, and Pomegranates as Symbols of Sovereignty
11.5 The Spies Motif
11.6 The New Jew as a Tiller of the Soil
11.7 Herzl’s Cypress Tree Myth
11.8 Unfamiliar Wild Plants
11.9 “A Very Lovely Cyclamen”
11.10 “We Shall Return as Red Flowers”
11.11 “Nobody Understands Cyclamens Anymore”
11.12 Local Plants Revisited
11.13 A Symbol Shared by Two Peoples: The Israeli Cactus
12 Ancient Magic and Modern Transformation: The Unique Hebrew Alphabet
12.1 Hebrew Calligraphy
12.2 Hebrew Typography
12.3 Hebrew Typography in Israeli Design
12.4 Uses of the Hebrew Alphabet in Non-textual Israeli Visual Media
Part 3: Sculptural Commemoration within the Israeli Public Space
13 From Pilgrimage Site to Military Marching Grounds: Theodor Herzl’s Gravesite in Jerusalem
13.1 Herzl’s Coffin Brought to Tel Aviv
13.2 Herzl’s Burial Ceremony in Jerusalem
13.3 International Competition for Herzl’s Burial Site Design
13.4 Winner of the Competition: Yosef Klarwein’s Design
13.5 Runner-up Prize: Danziger and Shalgi’s Design
13.6 The Committee for Herzl’s Burial Site Doubts Its Own Decisions
13.7 Herzl’s Tomb Final Design and Unveiling
14 Natan Rapoport’s Soviet Style of the Yad Mordechai and Negba Memorials
14.1 Ghetto Heroism and Israeli Valor
14.2 The Yad Mordechai Memorial
14.3 The Negba Memorial
15 Holocaust and Resurrection in Yigal Tumarkin’s Memorial in Tel Aviv
15.1 Is It Possible to Render the Holocaust Visually?
15.2 The International Committee, Auschwitz
15.3 Israeli Holocaust Memorials at Yad Vashem
15.4 The Memorial to the Holocaust and the Resurrection of Israel
16 In Conclusion: Secularizing the Sacred, Israeli Art, and Jewish Orthodox Laws
16.1 The Hebrew Bible: A Spring Abundant with Narratives and Allegorical Figures
16.2 A Visual Discourse with Jewish Artists from the Past
16.3 Israeli “Graven Images”
16.4 Hybrids
16.5 Jewish Angels and Israeli Cherubs
16.6 Taharah and tum’ah (Purity and Impurity)
General Index
Notă biografică
Alec Mishory's publications deal with the origins of Israeli art and its links with Jewish themes and Zionist utopias including The Jewish Art Scene in Israel 1948-1949 (2013) and Joseph Budko's Design of H. N. Bialik’s Works Edition of 1923 (2006).