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Author

  • Almog, Yael (2)
  • Sauter, Caroline (1)
  • Weidner, Daniel (1)

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  • 2017 (1)
  • 2019 (1)

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  • German-Jewish history (1)
  • Kommentar (1)
  • Margarete Susman (1)
  • Philologie (1)
  • Säkularisierung (1)
  • Zionism (1)
  • diaspora (1)
  • modern Jewish history (1)
  • theodicy (1)

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  • Evangelische Theologie (1)

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Kommentar und Säkularisierung in der Moderne: Einleitung (2017)
Almog, Yael ; Sauter, Caroline ; Weidner, Daniel
Die Frage ist, ob und in welcher Weise säkulare Texte auf religiöse Auslegungspraktiken und Deutungsmuster rekurrieren, und welche Verschiebungen dabei zwischen ihnen stattfinden. Die Autoren gehen dabei erstens davon aus, dass der Kommentar eine paradoxe Textpraxis ist, und zweitens davon, dass diese Paradoxie in der Moderne besonders dort manifest wird, wo sie sich mit denjenigen Paradoxien berührt oder überschneidet, die im Prozess der Säkularisierung entstehen.
Jewish diaspora and the stakes of nationalism: Margarete Susman’s theodicy (2019)
Almog, Yael
This article unpacks Margarete Susman’s political and theological arguments at the core of her reading of the Book of Job. As I show through a reading of her oeuvre, Susman rejects political projects that she takes to be based on eschatology such as political Zionism. However, Susman should not be viewed merely as a critic of Zionism. I argue that an analysis tuned to the historical circumstances of her writing should recognize her stance on the nation-building project in Palestine as ambivalent rather than antagonistic. Susman’s conception of the Jewish spirit as rooted in self-sacrifice allows her to appreciate the national aspirations at the core of the Zionist project while rejecting Zionism’s exclusion of other Jewish national projects. I contend that Susman’s understanding of Jewish messianism as immanent rather than teleological informs her ambivalence toward Zionism as well as her original vision of Jewish political action. I argue in closing that Susman’s theodicy offers a novel vision for Jewish ethics that is not limited to the historical moment of its formulation. Susman’s theodicy also resonates within contemporary debates on Jewish diaspora in providing a non-centralized vision of Jewish national projects.
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