Open Minded Torah: Of Irony, Fundamentalism and Love
Autor Professor William Kolbreneren Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 mai 2011
Preț: 113.25 lei
Preț vechi: 199.12 lei
-43%
Puncte Express: 170
Preț estimativ în valută:
20.05€ • 23.37$ • 17.37£
20.05€ • 23.37$ • 17.37£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 06-20 februarie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441118660
ISBN-10: 1441118667
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 126 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441118667
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 126 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Prologue: Velvel, Govorovo, 1939 \ I. Desire and Self \ 1 Making Exceptions \ 2 Do it Again Denzel: Fantasy and
Second Chances \ 3 Caught in the Act: Torah and Desire \ 4 Just Dreamin': The Talmud and the Interpretation of Dreams \ 5 The Big Game: Baseball, John Milton and Making Choices \ 6 Of Rabbis and Rotting Meat \ 7 Identity is Out! \ 8 Isaac's Bad Rap \ 9 Cheeseburger \ 10 Writing an Inspirational Story \ 11 Eros and Translation \ 12 Swaying Towards Perfection: Torah, Worldliness and Perversion \ 13 Jacob's Scar: Wounding and Identity \ 14 Torah and the Pleasure Principle \ II. Dispute and Community \ 15 Oedipus in a Kippa \ 16 Open Minded Torah I: Judaism and Fundamentalism \ 17 Irony Über Alles: An Episcopal Passover \ 18 Of False Kabbalists and Conjurers:
Parenting and Idolatry \ 19 From Sinai to the Uzi: New and Old Zionisms \ 20 Modernity is Hell: Korah and Hobbes \ 21 Lost and Found \ 22 The Poetry of the World: God's Place \ 23 Open Minded Torah II: Judaism and Postmodernism \ 24 Stepping Up \ 25 Prayer and the People: A New Siddur \ 26 A Religion for Adults? \ 27 Of Fundamentalists, Rabbis and Irony \ 28 Don't Take Away My Mitzva! \ 29 Fear and Loathing in Jerusalem \ 30 Open Minded Torah III: Between Fundamentalism and Postmodernism \ III. Time and Memory \ 31 Carpe Diem, Dude \ 32 The Antidote for Religion: Fear of God \ 33 Speech in Exile and the Voice of the Shofar 34 Back to the Future: Yom Kippur and Creative Repentance \ 35 Shades of Faith: My Sukka is Not Insured by AIG \ 36 'A Special Conversation': Freud, the Maharal and the Sabbath \ 37 Lighting Up: The Beauty of Hanuka \ 38 Whose Letter is it Anyway: Esther, Aristotle and the Art of Letter-Writing \ 39 Cosmic Consciousness: The Beatles, Passover and the Power of Storytelling \ 40 Trauma's Legacy: On Israel's Memorial Day \ 41 Why I Gave Up Biblical Criticism and Just Learned to Love \ 42 Faceless: the Ninth of Av \ Epilogue: Shmuel, Jerusalem, 2011 \ Citations \ Select Bibliography \ Index
Second Chances \ 3 Caught in the Act: Torah and Desire \ 4 Just Dreamin': The Talmud and the Interpretation of Dreams \ 5 The Big Game: Baseball, John Milton and Making Choices \ 6 Of Rabbis and Rotting Meat \ 7 Identity is Out! \ 8 Isaac's Bad Rap \ 9 Cheeseburger \ 10 Writing an Inspirational Story \ 11 Eros and Translation \ 12 Swaying Towards Perfection: Torah, Worldliness and Perversion \ 13 Jacob's Scar: Wounding and Identity \ 14 Torah and the Pleasure Principle \ II. Dispute and Community \ 15 Oedipus in a Kippa \ 16 Open Minded Torah I: Judaism and Fundamentalism \ 17 Irony Über Alles: An Episcopal Passover \ 18 Of False Kabbalists and Conjurers:
Parenting and Idolatry \ 19 From Sinai to the Uzi: New and Old Zionisms \ 20 Modernity is Hell: Korah and Hobbes \ 21 Lost and Found \ 22 The Poetry of the World: God's Place \ 23 Open Minded Torah II: Judaism and Postmodernism \ 24 Stepping Up \ 25 Prayer and the People: A New Siddur \ 26 A Religion for Adults? \ 27 Of Fundamentalists, Rabbis and Irony \ 28 Don't Take Away My Mitzva! \ 29 Fear and Loathing in Jerusalem \ 30 Open Minded Torah III: Between Fundamentalism and Postmodernism \ III. Time and Memory \ 31 Carpe Diem, Dude \ 32 The Antidote for Religion: Fear of God \ 33 Speech in Exile and the Voice of the Shofar 34 Back to the Future: Yom Kippur and Creative Repentance \ 35 Shades of Faith: My Sukka is Not Insured by AIG \ 36 'A Special Conversation': Freud, the Maharal and the Sabbath \ 37 Lighting Up: The Beauty of Hanuka \ 38 Whose Letter is it Anyway: Esther, Aristotle and the Art of Letter-Writing \ 39 Cosmic Consciousness: The Beatles, Passover and the Power of Storytelling \ 40 Trauma's Legacy: On Israel's Memorial Day \ 41 Why I Gave Up Biblical Criticism and Just Learned to Love \ 42 Faceless: the Ninth of Av \ Epilogue: Shmuel, Jerusalem, 2011 \ Citations \ Select Bibliography \ Index
Recenzii
'This collection of short personal essays covers a wide range of topics, illustrating how open mindedness allows us to more genuinely engage with our Judaism...' -JTNews: The Voice of Jewish Washington
Reviewed in the Jewish Quarterly.
Recommendation on the Jewish Daily Forward Sisterhood blog, http://blogs.forward.com/sisterhood-blog/139549/
Short article on author/book at http://www.mishpacha.com/Browse/Article/1220/A-Vital-Relationship
Interview with the author at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/animal/2011/07/27/billy-kolbrener
Author interview in The Jerusalem Post
The author... strives for Jewish engagement through open-mindedness, for a point between today's extremes of strident adherence to the letter of the law, and rejection of that law. His premise- that in Judaism, there is space to let in the world around us- is refreshing and welcome.
Kolbrener will make an agreeable literary companion over a weekend, an elegant exponent of 21st-century Torah im derech eretz, rooted in traditional Jewish commitment while open to wider civilisation. He moves effortlessly from personal experience to the world of ideas... Arguing for a "Jewish multiculturalism" in Israel, Kolbrener champions cultured complexity over over-restrictive conformity. His cosmopolitan sensibility is a model for mainstream Jewish day schools to aspire to. http://www.thejc.com/judaism/judaism-book-reviews/61802/open-minded-torah
'This beautiful book is an exhilarating hybrid, steeped in traditional learning but at home in the modern world, centered on universal questions and yet deeply personal, informed by theology and philosophy and yet guided quite humbly by the challenge of living each day with wisdom and kindness.' - Jonathan Rosen, author of The Talmud and the Internet
'When a great and capacious mind, blessed with sensibility and sensitivity, engages in conversation with the timeless texts of Torah, the result is both enlightening and enthralling. That is what William Kolbrener's new book represents, and all whose Judaism is reflective and thoughtful will be enlarged by it.'- Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks
'William Kolbrener is adept at finding Torah in places where you don't expect it and at finding the unanticipated in the Torah. This is a book for people who want help listening for the elusive, important silences that course beneath the clamor of everyday life.'- Judith Shulevitz, author of The Sabbath World
Reviewed in the Jewish Quarterly.
Recommendation on the Jewish Daily Forward Sisterhood blog, http://blogs.forward.com/sisterhood-blog/139549/
Short article on author/book at http://www.mishpacha.com/Browse/Article/1220/A-Vital-Relationship
Interview with the author at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/animal/2011/07/27/billy-kolbrener
Author interview in The Jerusalem Post
The author... strives for Jewish engagement through open-mindedness, for a point between today's extremes of strident adherence to the letter of the law, and rejection of that law. His premise- that in Judaism, there is space to let in the world around us- is refreshing and welcome.
Kolbrener will make an agreeable literary companion over a weekend, an elegant exponent of 21st-century Torah im derech eretz, rooted in traditional Jewish commitment while open to wider civilisation. He moves effortlessly from personal experience to the world of ideas... Arguing for a "Jewish multiculturalism" in Israel, Kolbrener champions cultured complexity over over-restrictive conformity. His cosmopolitan sensibility is a model for mainstream Jewish day schools to aspire to. http://www.thejc.com/judaism/judaism-book-reviews/61802/open-minded-torah
'This beautiful book is an exhilarating hybrid, steeped in traditional learning but at home in the modern world, centered on universal questions and yet deeply personal, informed by theology and philosophy and yet guided quite humbly by the challenge of living each day with wisdom and kindness.' - Jonathan Rosen, author of The Talmud and the Internet
'When a great and capacious mind, blessed with sensibility and sensitivity, engages in conversation with the timeless texts of Torah, the result is both enlightening and enthralling. That is what William Kolbrener's new book represents, and all whose Judaism is reflective and thoughtful will be enlarged by it.'- Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks
'William Kolbrener is adept at finding Torah in places where you don't expect it and at finding the unanticipated in the Torah. This is a book for people who want help listening for the elusive, important silences that course beneath the clamor of everyday life.'- Judith Shulevitz, author of The Sabbath World