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E-book
Author Schmidt, Gilya Gerda.

Title Martin Buber's formative years : from German culture to Jewish renewal, 1897-1909 / Gilya Gerda Schmidt
Published Tuscaloosa, Ala. : University of Alabama Press, ©1995

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Description 1 online resource (xiv, 177 pages) : illustrations
Series Judaic studies series
Judaic studies series (Unnumbered)
Contents Prologue: the problem of individuation and community -- A time of crisis: contemporary cultural concerns, 1897-1901 -- Academic beginnings: apprenticeship in aesthetics, 1897-1904 -- Kadima! apprenticeship in Jewish culture, 1898-1905 -- Hasidism: apprenticeship in a life of the communal spirit, 1905-1908 -- Epilogue: toward a synthesis of all syntheses
Summary During the period from 1897 to 1909, Buber's keen sense of the crisis of humanity, his intimate knowledge of German culture and Jewish sources, and his fearlessness in the face of possible ridicule challenged him to behave in a manner so outrageous and so contrary to German-Jewish tradition that he actually achieved a transformation of himself and those close to him. Calling on spiritual giants of great historical periods in German, Christian, and Jewish history - such as Nicolas of Cusa, Jakob Bohme, Israel Baal Shem Tov, Rabbi Nachman of Brazlav, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Friedrich Nietzsche - Buber proceeded to subvert the existing order by turning his upside-down world of slave morality right side up once more
If contemporary life was bankrupt, why lament? Did not God command humanity to act? Buber wholeheartedly immersed himself in the making of a new world, of Zionist culture, of Hasidic spirituality, of Romantic individuality, of unity from diversity. By examining the multitude of disparate sources that Buber turned to for inspiration, this book aims to elucidate Buber's creative genius and his contribution to turn-of-the-century Jewish renewal. Schmidt's timely and comprehensive study concludes that Buber was successful in creating the German-Jewish symbiosis that Emancipation was to have created for the two peoples, but that this synthesis was tragic because it came too late for practical application by Jews in Germany. Those listening to Buber were about to leave voluntarily for the ancestral Jewish homeland, and the Jews who were not interested then were later forced to leave - or to submit to worse fates. The opportunity for the realization of a German-Jewish symbiosis had passed
Martin Buber (1878-1965) was born into a world of two cultures - his Jewish family and his Austrian fatherland. During his childhood with his grandparents in Galician Lvov, Jewish values and German aesthetics coexisted. But after Buber re-entered fin-de-siecle Viennese society, the world of his grandparents fell apart. Nothing was as it should have been: Jewish hopes for full social integration were disappointed, Yiddish culture seemingly caused modern Jewish youth to be impoverished, and the Jewish religion had become ossified. In his personal confusion, Buber clearly grasped the essence of the problem: emancipation had failed, German culture was dying, Jews were on their own, and tradition was no longer good enough
Notes Rev. version of the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pittsburgh, 1991
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 161-168) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Buber, Martin, 1878-1965 -- Childhood and youth
SUBJECT Buber, Martin, 1878-1965 fast
Subject Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life
RELIGION -- Judaism -- Theology.
Childhood and youth of a person
Jews -- Intellectual life
Germany
Genre/Form Biographies
Biografieën (vorm)
Biographies.
Biographies.
Form Electronic book
LC no. 94024877
ISBN 0585225818
9780585225814
0817391800
9780817391805