Fr. 139.00

Cultural Translation - The Haskalah Library and the Making of the Modern Jew

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, the maskilim, a group of young Jewish intellectuals who were starving for universal knowledge and for engagement with wider social circles, set out to reform Jewish society by expanding its cultural boundaries and building a bridge to the Enlightened world. Through dialogue with the non-Jewish society, and by introducing their fellow Jews to the texts and cultural goods of that society, mainly through translation, they sought to promote their social agenda and impart to their readers a new habitus, new social models of Bürgerlichkeit and Bildung, and a new awareness of civil equality and civil rights. This book explores this translational project and the ways by which it strove to affect a profound cultural change in the Jewish world.
Zohar Shavit, professor emerita at the School for Cultural Studies at Tel Aviv University, is an internationally renowned authority on the history of Israeli culture, child and youth culture, and Hebrew and Jewish cultures, especially in the context of their relations with various European cultures. In 2025, she won the Israel Prize in the field of Culture and Arts for her groundbreaking research on childrens' culture, cultural transition, and the cultural history in Israeli and Jewish society.
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Info autore

Zohar Shavit, professor emerita at the School for Cultural Studies at Tel Aviv University, is an internationally renowned authority on the history of Israeli culture, child and youth culture, and Hebrew and Jewish cultures, especially in the context of their relations with various European cultures.

Riassunto

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, the maskilim, a group of young Jewish intellectuals who were starving for universal knowledge and for engagement with wider social circles, set out to reform Jewish society by expanding its cultural boundaries and building a bridge to the Enlightened world. Through dialogue with the non-Jewish society, and by introducing their fellow Jews to the texts and cultural goods of that society, mainly through translation, they sought to promote their social agenda and impart to their readers a new habitus, new social models of Bürgerlichkeit and Bildung, and a new awareness of civil equality and civil rights. This book explores this translational project and the ways by which it strove to affect a profound cultural change in the Jewish world.
Zohar Shavit, professor emerita at the School for Cultural Studies at Tel Aviv University, is an internationally renowned authority on the history of Israeli culture, child and youth culture, and Hebrew and Jewish cultures, especially in the context of their relations with various European cultures. In 2025, she won the Israel Prize in the field of Culture and Arts for her groundbreaking research on childrens' culture, cultural transition, and the cultural history in Israeli and Jewish society.
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Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Zohar Shavit
Editore De Gruyter
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Copertina rigida
Pubblicazione 27.01.2025
 
EAN 9783111337043
ISBN 978-3-11-133704-3
Pagine 191
Dimensioni 155 mm x 18 mm x 230 mm
Peso 413 g
Illustrazioni 10 b/w and 5 col. ill.
Serie Studia Judaica
Categorie Scienze umane, arte, musica > Religione / teologia > Ebraismo

Aufklärung, Haskala, Jewish Studies, Judaism, REL040000 RELIGION / Judaism / General, REL040030 RELIGION / Judaism / History, modern Hebrew culture, Haskalah movement, Cultural Translation, Maskil, dynamics of cultural system.

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