Kirjailijakuva

Nahum N. Glatzer (1903–1990)

Teoksen The Passover Haggadah tekijä

40+ teosta 1,345 jäsentä 8 arvostelua 1 Favorited

Tietoja tekijästä

Tekijän teokset

The Passover Haggadah (1969) 241 kappaletta
The Judaic Tradition (1969) 125 kappaletta
Language of Faith (1947) 123 kappaletta
Hammer on the Rock (1948) — Toimittaja — 121 kappaletta
On the Bible (1968) — Toimittaja — 94 kappaletta
Dimensions of Job (1969) 88 kappaletta
Hillel the elder (1957) 71 kappaletta
Loves of Franz Kafka (1986) 35 kappaletta
Faith and knowledge (1963) 16 kappaletta
Essays in Jewish thought (1978) 9 kappaletta
The Way of Response (1966) 4 kappaletta
The Memoirs of Nahum N. Glatzer (1997) 4 kappaletta

Associated Works

Kootut kertomukset (1971) — Toimittaja — 5,747 kappaletta
A History of the Jewish People in the Time of Jesus (1961)eräät painokset102 kappaletta

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

Kanoninen nimi
Glatzer, Nahum N.
Syntymäaika
1903-03-25
Kuolinaika
1990-02-27
Sukupuoli
male
Kansalaisuus
USA

Jäseniä

Kirja-arvosteluja

Loves of Franz Kafka is a short book that describes the women Franz Kafka loved and had relationships with. Nahum Norbert Glatzer was an Austrian / American scholar who made great contributions to the popularization of the works of Kafka to English-speaking readership, editing and publishing various books by Franz Kafka. Loves of Franz Kafka is a short work that was his last publication, published in 1985.

Besides the novels, short stories and diaries, there are several volumes of letters by Kafka to women he loved, notably Briefe an Milena, Briefe an Felice and Briefe an Ottla und die Familie. Glatzer describes eight women who were important in Kafka's love life: Flora Klug, Mania Tschissik, Felice Bauer, Grete Bloch, Julie Wohryzek, Milena Jesenska, Minze Eissner and Dora Dymant. Chapters are all rather short. Often more is known about the biography of Kafka than the women.

On the first page, Glatzer writes that Kafka strongly troubled by filth (Schmutz) Kafka had a troubled, uneasy relation with women and was revulsed by the idea of having sex with them. THe shrank back from sexual activity which he saw as dirty and revulsive. To Kafka the filth of sex originated with the women. So many of the relationships ended, as Kafka could not bear them to full fruition.

Another characteristic of Kafka's relation with women is that he preferred young women. The succession of the relationships with these eight women all took place within about 10 years, between 1912 and 1923.
… (lisätietoja)
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Merkitty asiattomaksi
edwinbcn | Oct 23, 2023 |
The Pharisees are negative figures in the New Testament. In the Gospels, they serve largely to place Jesus by contrast in a positive light. Tradition in the past two thousand years, both within and without the church, has been even less kind. To counteract this tendency, and the unconscious influence it can exercise, it is useful to study the self-perception of adherents of this movement.
This slim monograph is a useful introduction to the towering figure of Hillel the Elder, the influential Pharisee teacher. He stands at the dawn of the formation of classical Judaism, a movement largely defined by successors of the Pharisees. It focused on the study of the Torah, personal holiness, and acts of mercy, and provided a viable substitute for temple-based worship after Jerusalem's destruction. It became the Judaism that survived the catastrophic events of the first and second centuries of the common era.
Glatzer acknowledges that any scholar approaching Hillel must deal with a mixture of historical reminiscence and legend, yet in the course of his narrative, it is clear that he belongs to those confident that a reliable portrait can nevertheless be delineated. Other scholars are not as sanguine.
Still, I was fascinated by Glatzer's reconstruction of Hillel's life. He posits that Hillel first arrived in Jerusalem from Babylon to study with the acknowledged masters, then withdrew and spent decades among the sectarians in the wilderness. In describing this, Glatzer is careful to differentiate between the Essenes, known from Josephus and Philo, and the Community of the Covenant, to whom he attributes the Dead Sea Scrolls that had recently been discovered and only partially published when this book appeared. As Glatzer tells it, “early Hasidism” (a term he uses for the common antecedents of Pharisaism and Essenism) bifurcated: the Pharisees, who remained centered on Jerusalem, became more rigid and—though Glatzer does not use the word—casuistic; meanwhile the sectarians retained a lively spirit of intense scrutiny of the Torah but in a withdrawn setting. In this telling, Hillel absorbed the best of what the sectarians had to offer but rejected their separatism and dualism. He returned to Jerusalem and acceptance by the Pharisees as their leading teacher, in effect reuniting the two traditions.
In keeping with Hillel's rejection of sectarian isolation, Glatzer differentiates between “community,” which Hillel strove to promote, and “state,” with which Hillel sought to have as little to do as possible.
Another tantalizing feature of this book is the author’s speculation that Judaism would have continued to interact with Greek philosophy and adapt more of its tenets in fruitful appropriation if Greece had not been replaced by Rome as the dominant power in the eastern Mediterranean. For Jews, Rome represented subjugation, not dialogue.
Glatzer admires Hillel and all that he stood for. While his book helps counteract the negative portrait of the Pharisees, I wonder if some of the terms he uses to describe the movement (progressive, liberal, democratic) are not anachronistic. It is evident, though, that in using them, Glatzer shows that he shares the humane, forbearing, humble qualities he finds exemplified in Hillel.
… (lisätietoja)
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
HenrySt123 | Jul 19, 2021 |
Washington State Reformatory
Monroe, Washington
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
bkadden | 1 muu arvostelu | Nov 15, 2020 |
Epigraph: "Is not My word like...a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces?
" Jer. 23:29. As the hammer splits the rock into many splinters, so will a scriptural verse yield many meanings. -- Sanhedrin 34A.

SORROW
When Moses descended from Mount Sinai, and saw the abominations of Israel, he gazed at the tablets and saw that the words had flown away. [73]
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Merkitty asiattomaksi
keylawk | Jun 20, 2019 |

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