Judaism III: Culture and Modernity (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit)

دانلود کتاب Judaism III: Culture and Modernity (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit)

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کتاب یهودیت سوم: فرهنگ و مدرنیته (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit) نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Judaism III: Culture and Modernity (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit)

نام کتاب : Judaism III: Culture and Modernity (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit)
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : یهودیت سوم: فرهنگ و مدرنیته (RM Die Religionen der Menschheit)
سری :
نویسندگان : , ,
ناشر : Kohlhammer Verlag
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 240
ISBN (شابک) : 9783170325876 , 9783170325906
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 3 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Cover\nTitlepage\nImprint\nContent\nForeword\n 1 Die Wissenschaft des Judentums\n 2 World War II and Vatican II\n 3 Jacob Neusner resets the agenda\n 4 Martin Hengel, Judentum und Hellenismus (Judaism and Hellenism)\n 5 The New Academy\n 6 Kohlhammer’s Die Religionen der Menschheit\nJewish engagement(s) with Modern Culture\n 1 The challenges of modernization\n 2 Hopes of belonging and experiences of rejection\n 3 From Berlin to Tel Aviv and Los Angeles: The internationalisation of Jewish modernity\n 4 After the Holocaust: Has modernity betrayed Jewish culture?\n For further reading\nHalakhah (Jewish Law) in Contemporary Judaism\n 1 Napoleon and the Functioning of Jewish Law in Enlightenment Countries\n 2 Jewish Legal Theories in Response to Living in Countries with Freedom of Religion\n 3 The Authority of Jewish Law\n 4 Jewish Identity: Who Is a Jew?\n 5 Moral Issues: Bioethics\n 5.1 The Beginning of Life: Generating Pregnancy\n 5.2 The Beginning of Life: Preventing Pregnancy\n 6 Moral Issues: Interpersonal Relations\n 7 Moral Issues: Social Justice and Environmental Ethics\n 8 Jewish Dietary Laws (Kashrut, or the Kosher Laws)\n 9 The Life Cycle\n 10 Marriage and Weddings\n 11 The Seasonal Cycle: The Sabbath, High Holy Days, and Festivals\n 12 A Gift of Love\n For further reading\nLanguages of the Jews\n Prolegomenon\n 1 Mono-, Bi-, and Multilingualism\n 2 Hebrew\n 2.1 Ancient Hebrew\n 2.2 Postbiblical Hebrew\n 2.3 Rabbinic or Mishnaic Hebrew\n 2.4 From Ancient Hebrew to Medieval, Sephardic Hebrew\n 2.5 Ashkenazic Hebrew\n 2.6 Israeli Hebrew\n 3 Aramaic\n 3.1 Imperial Aramaic\n 3.2 Jewish-Palestinian Aramaic\n 3.3 Christian-Palestinian Aramaic\n 3.4 Jewish-Babylonian Aramaic\n 3.5 Jewish neo-Aramaic dialects\n 4 Greek\n 5 Judeo-Arabic\n 6 Ladino\n 7 Yiddish\n 7.1 The Origins of Yiddish\n 7.2 A Language with many Dialects\n 7.3 From Jewish-German to Yiddish\n 7.4 The Yiddish of the Pious\n 8 Judeo-Persian\n 9 Conclusion\n For further reading\nJewish Philosophy and Thought\n 1 The Concept of »Jewish Philosophy«\n 2 Between Palestine and Babylon: Philosophical Potential in Traditional Literature (2nd to 11th cent.)\n 3 Hellenistic Judaism: Alexandria\n 4 Under Islam in the East: Baghdad and Kairouan\n 5 Under Islam in the West: al-Andalus\n 6 Under Christianity in the West: Southern France, Spain, Italy\n 7 Ottoman Empire: Thessaloniki, Istanbul\n 8 The Reconfiguration of »Jewish Philosophy« in the Context of Modernity: Amsterdam, Berlin Haskalah, and Wissenschaft des Judentums\n 9 Jewish Diaspora and Israeli Thought after the Holocaust\n For further reading\nModern Jewish Literature\n 1 Concept\n 2 Pioneers and Beginnings\n 3 On »German-Jewish Literature«\n 4 Yiddish Literature\n 5 English-language Literature\n 6 Hebrew Literature\n 7 Drama\n 8 Lyric Poetry\n For further reading\nJudaism, Feminism, and Gender\n 1 1970s Jewish Feminism: Coming out Fighting\n 2 1980s: Toward Finding the Right Question(s)\n 3 1990s: Coming of Age: Jewish Feminism and »(En)gendering« Jewish Studies\n 3.1 Feminist Scholarship; Gender and Jewish Studies\n 3.2 Jewish Women’s Writings: Memoirs and Midrash; Commentaries and Anthologies\n 3.3 Bridges, Feminist Organizations and Social Justice Work\n 4 21st Century: »New« Jewish Feminism\n 5 Conclusion\n For further reading\nJudaism and inter-faith relations since World War II\n 1 Historic overview\n 2 Jewish-Christian Dialogue\n 2.1 Beginnings\n 2.2 The World Council of Churches until Sigtuna (1988)\n 2.3 Articulating a Jewish Response\n 2.4 The Roman Catholic Church\n 2.5 The World Council of Churches after Sigtuna (1988)\n 2.6 Individual non-Roman Churches\n 2.7 Orthodox Churches and the Demise of Communism\n 2.8 Some Recent Statements\n 2.9 Israel and Interfaith Dialogue\n 2.10 Jewish Responses\n 3 Other Religions\n 3.1 Dialogue with Islam\n 3.2 Non-Abrahamic Religions\n 4 New Horizons: Scholars and Theologians\n 4.1 Covenant Theology\n 4.2 New Theologies: Feminism, Liberation, Creation\n 4.3 The Global Context of Dialogue\n 4.4 Academic Developments\n 4.5 Dialogue Moulds Theology\n 5 The Popularization and Secularization of Dialogue\n 6 Conclusion\n For further reading\nIndex\n 1 Sources\n 1.1 Biblical Sources\n 1.2 Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha\n 1.3 Rabbinic Sources\n 2 Names\n 3 Keywords




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