Fr. 165.00

Shaping the Jewish Enlightenment - Solomon Dubno (1738–1813), an Eastern European Maskil

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Pubblicazione il 21.11.2023

Descrizione

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Krzemien's book delves into the life of Solomon Dubno (1738?1813), a devout Polish Jew who was pivotal to Moses Mendelssohn's project of translating the Bible into German. It explores Dubno's role, his library's influence, and his poetic endeavors to showcase the beauty of Hebrew. The work offers a nuanced image of the early Haskalah movement.

Sommario

A Note from the Editors

Preface: Zuzanna Krzemień at University College London

A Note on the Presentation of Source Materials



Introduction

   Eastern European participation in the Jewish Enlightenment: the lessons of one life

   A Jewish scholar's life between Volhynia, Berlin, and Amsterdam

   Re-orientations: the scope and limits of Jewish intellectual transformation in the Age of Enlightenment

   Dubno, Hebrew Literature, and the Haskalah

   Chapter outline



1. Solomon Dubno's Booklists

   Introduction

   Book collecting in early modern times

   The content of Solomon Dubno’s library

     General overview

     Methods of book collecting

     Maskilic works

     Non-Jewish books and works on Christianity

     Rabbinic literature

     Authors with the largest number of books in Dubno’s booklist

     Philosophy

     Poetry and belles lettres

     History and contemporary Jewish conflicts

     Grammar

     Science

     Dubno’s collex

Conclusion



2. Dubno and the Biur Project

   The publication of the Biur

   The conflict between Mendelssohn and Dubno

   Dubno’s role in the publication of the Biur

   The authorship of Alim li-terufah

   The Biur and the Jewish tradition of biblical textual criticism

   The Biur as a debate with Christianity

   The reaction to the publication of the Biur

   Speculations regarding Dubno’s withdrawal from the Biur project

   Dubno’s own Pentateuch edition

   Conclusion



3. Dubno and the Renewal of Hebrew Language

   The study of Hebrew grammar among Ashkenazi Jewry

   Dubno’s views on Hebrew grammar

   The status of the Hebrew language in the maskilic community

   Enlightenment thinkers’ views on language

   Dubno’s belief in the divine nature of Hebrew

   Dubno’s view of the German Pentateuch translation

   Conclusion



4. Dubno’s Poetry and Belles Lettres

   Introduction

   Maskilic Hebrew poetry in the eighteenth century

   “Yuval ve-Na’aman”

   Dubno’s poetry

   Works wrongly attributed to Dubno

   Conclusion



Conclusions



Bibliography

Appendix

Se’u enekhem

Shir kashur min me’ah yetedot

Shir na’eh al midat ha-ḥanupah

Info autore










Zuzanna Krzemień (1987-2021) received her doctorate from the Hebrew and Jewish Studies Department at University College London. She held fellowships from the Posen Foundation and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, and served as the curator of East European collections in the British Library in London.

Riassunto

Drawing from diverse multilingual sources, Krzemień delves into Solomon Dubno's life (1738–1813), unraveling complexities of the Haskalah movement's ties to Eastern European Jewish culture. Dubno, a devout Polish Jew and adept Hebrew grammarian, played a pivotal role in Moses Mendelssohn's endeavor to translate the Bible into German with a modern commentary (Biur). The book explores Dubno's library, mapping the intellectual realm of a Polish Maskil in Western Europe. It assesses his influence on Mendelssohn's project and the reasons behind their divergence. Additionally, it analyzes Dubno's poetry, designed to captivate peers with the Bible's linguistic beauty. The outcome portrays early Haskalah as a polyvocal, polycentric creation shaped by diverse, occasionally conflicting, visions, personalities, and egos.

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