Seven Jewish Cultures
Professor Shmueli has synthesized history, philosophy, biblical scholarship, sociology, literature and psychology into an original and profound new view of Jewish history. Jewish history is viewed as an unfolding of seven successive systems of cultures, where each culture emerges in its time both as a rebel and a successor of previous cultures. Each presents itself as a distinct and often startlingly different framework in which the meaning of Jewish life is always interpreted anew. In this sense, Jewish history may be said to have undergone seven great "Renaissances."
This study emphasizes the chasm that divides the five "cultures of faith" from the secular cultures of the Emancipation and nationalist-Israeli periods. Shmueli argues that the cultures of modernity have created a new frame of reference for the Jewish people. No longer is Jewish history viewed as a divine drama, and no longer is the Bible seen as the hermeneutical key to all Jewish problems. Both in Israel and outside it, claims Shmueli, there is a need for a new balance that will retain the creative elements of the past and, at the same time, permit reinterpretation and change.
Reviews & endorsements
"This elegant translation of Shmueli's 1980 magnum opus continues the tradition of the great modern historians of the Jews who believed that the critical scrutiny of the Jewish past should yield a program for the reconstruction of Jewry in the future." Religious Studies Review
"Seven Jewish Cultures provides an answer for both Orthodox and Secular Jews." Shimon Perez
Product details
June 1990Hardback
9780521373814
312 pages
229 × 152 × 21 mm
0.63kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. A wealth of cultures
- 2. Scripture and interpretation in Israel's cultures
- 3. Song of songs - a paradigm of cultural changes
- 4. The commandments in Israel's cultures
- 5. The three-fold tension in Jewish cultures
- 6. Historical knowledge in the cultures of faith
- 7. Historical consciousness in the Emancipation culture
- 8. The struggle for self-affirmation
- 9. Conclusions and implications.