Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Modern Hebrew literature has established a clear national identity, responsive at last to its own territorial conditions, expressed in a literary language which is finally also a vernacular. Keywords: Israeli culture, Hebrew Enlightenment, Haskalah, sacred Jewish texts, Israel, Hebrew-speakers.
29 Αυγ 2012 · Modern Hebrew literature emerged in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in European centers of Jewish life, such as Berlin, Vilna, and Warsaw. Often considered as part of the Haskalah (Jewish enlightenment), its various themes and genres were acutely attuned to historical change and may be understood in relation to the modernization of large ...
Jews, concerned with restoring a vital Jewish culture in the ancient Jewish homeland, belittled the “diasporic” culture of “sterile” learning embodied by the Babylonian Talmud.
The expert contributors to this volume, who negotiate the literature in the original languages, provide insight into the influence of national traditions and the importance of language, especially but not exclusively Yiddish and Hebrew, to the literary response arising from the Holocaust.
The Object of Jewish Literature: A Material History reads twentieth-century Jewish literature through the lens of material culture, analyzing the material qualities of texts, the literary depiction of objects, and discourse about materiality during a period shaped by migration, war, and social and political change. 4 Close The primary contours ...
Our analysis of Jewish literature as world literature deals with belletristic works writ-ten by Jews from the 1840s to the 1940s, a period that comprises the Haskalah, a Jewish response to the Enlightenment, and its im-mediate aftermath, known to Hebrew liter-ary historians as the Tehiya (revival).11 The development of secular Jewish literature was
the central Jewish literature potentially pertinent to the background study of early Christianity. Generally, the procedure followed for each Jewish writing is to list the most