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The Influence of Jewish Culture on the Intellectual Heritage of Central and Eastern Europe

 

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Teresa Obolevitch, Józef Bremer SJ (ed.)
The Influence of Jewish Culture on the Intellectual Heritage of Central and Eastern Europe
Kraków: Wyższa Szkoła Filozoficzno-Pedagogiczna „Ignatianum”, Wydawnictwo WAM 2011, pp. 388, ISBN 978-83-7505-852-9.

Book might be purchased at Publisher Internet Bookstore.

 

Content

  • Teresa Obolevitch, Józef Bremer, Preface.

Historico-cultural perspective

  • Tomasz Gąsowski, Yiddish Land – an Expedition to the Land of Shadows,
  • Edyta Koncewicz-Dziduch, Sephardi Jews in Bosnia and Herzegovina – Tradition and the Present,
  • Alexander Lokshin, On the History of Traditional Jewish Education in the Russian Empire: the Volozhin Yeshiva,
  • Olga Gubareva, The Mythologem of the Promised Land in the Soviet Culture,
  • Małgorzata Śliż, The Contribution of Scholars of Jewish Origin into the Development of Selected Fields of Study and Academic life, based on the example of the Jagiellonian University in Cracow in the Dayd of the Galician Autonomy.

Philosophico-theological perspective

  • Svetlana Klimova, The Russian and Polish Existentialism as mirrored by the “Jewish Problem” (the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries),
  • Irina Bardykova, “The Jewish Question” in Writer’s Diary by Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
  • Vyacheslav Musolov, Dialogue of Cultures: the Role of the Philosopher (based on the Interaction between the Jewish and Russian Cultures in the 19th century),
  • Victoria Kravchenko, The Kabbalistic concepts in Vladimir Solovyov’s Philosophy: Philosophical Tools and the Creative Development of Ancient Tradition,
  • Vyacheslav Moiseev, Judaic Motifs in the Works of Vladimir Solovyov and his “Logic of the Absolute”,
  • Alexey Kamenskikh, Philo of Alexandria and Vladimir Solovyov: Two ways of Sophiology,
  • Olga Zaprometova, The Symbol of Torah as Wisdom and Light refl ected in Eastern European Culture,
  • Vadim Miroshnychenko, On some features of the concepts of “Dialogue” and “Communion”: through Negation to All-Unity,
  • Peter Ehlen, The Personalistic Philosophy of Semyon L. Frank (1877–1950),
  • Teresa Obolevitch, Judaic Motifs in the life and works of Semyon Frank,
  • Oksana Dovgopolova, The “fraudulent” place of Lev Shestov in Russian Culture,
  • Krzysztof Duda, Jews and the implications of Judaism in the life and thought of Nikolai Berdyaev,
  • Ina Nalivaika, From the Profane to the Sacred: the Dialogue between I and Another in Poetry and Everydayness,
  • Olena Petrikovskaya, The Image of Judaism and the Problem of Synthesis of Religions in the Philosophy of “New Religious Consciousness”,
  • Oksana Kravchenko, The religious roots of the Aesthetic Principles (V. Ivanov on the Sublime),
  • Lidia Bogataya, The Infl uence of Kabbalah Ideas on Analyses’ Methodology Formation of Symbolic Units (based on V. Shmakov’s works),
  • Elina Shekhtman, The Seminal Idea of Dialogue in the Work of Martin Buber and Mikhail Bakhtin,
  • Svetlana Panich, “Jewish issue” in the Russian immigration discourse of 1930th–1940th: some refl ections on the Witness of Mother Maria (Skobtsova),
  • Józef Bremer, Wittgenstein and Hasidism: Some Remarks,
  • Andrzej Gielarowski, Revelation in the Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig and Józef Tischner,
  • Jacek Bolewski, The Significance of Gershom Scholem for Christians,
  • Kirill Voytsel, Israel and the Church: The Unity of the Community of Election in Karl Bacth’s Interpretation.

Literary perspective

  • Dieter Schrey, Borrowed Metaphysical Splendor. On the Possibility of an Aesthetic Theodicy after the Disruption of the Epoch (1914–1918) in the Example of Joseph Roth’s Job. Novel of a Simple Man,
  • Fritz Hackert, Does Joseph Roth’s Hiob Have a Happy Ending?,
  • Elina Sventsitskaya, Sergey Sichov, Tamara Panich, Jewish Tradition in Anna Akhmatova’s Poetry,
  • Irina Shatova, Particular characteristics of the Kabbalistic Idea of the Invisible Word Representation in Daniel Kharms’ Carnival Art.

 

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