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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: Jewish Studies Quarterly
    Angaben zur Quelle: 29,1 (2022) 89-108
    Keywords: Derrida, Jacques Criticism and interpretation ; Messiah Judaism
    Abstract: In his writings, Jacques Derrida adopts an ambivalent stance towards messianism: he adheres to a »messianic experience,« calling for readiness to whatever is about to come, but distances himself from the historical content of messianism. He suggests understanding the relation between the messianic structure and its content through a process of »desertification,« arguing that if we strip messianic narratives from their content, we find a structural experience of anticipation, or a »desert-like messianism.« Although Derrida's perception of messianism has received attention, scholars have refrained from examining the procedure of desertification and its implications for religious sources. In this paper I fill that lacuna and argue that desertification functions as a radical intervention in tradition, substantiating my argument by addressing the way Derrida »desertifies« the talmudic tale about the messiah at the gates of Rome. I demonstrate how Derrida strips the story of its content and turns the protagonist into an agent of deconstruction.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Journal of Jewish Studies
    Angaben zur Quelle: 74,1 (2023) 192-216
    Keywords: Scholem, Gershom, ; Kinot Criticism, interpretation, etc. ; Jewish philosophy 20th century ; Women in Judaism History of doctrines
    Abstract: This article proposes a new strategy for expanding the conversation on gender and Jewish philosophy with an emphasis on modern German-Jewish thought. The works of German-Jewish thinkers touch on a variety of issues, but almost always engage with Jewish Scriptures. The scriptural texts are abundant and include a gallery of female and male voices. The article asserts that by examining the way Scriptures are selectively interpreted and integrated into philosophical arguments, we can learn about the suppression of women’s voices, as well as concepts of gender and femininity in Jewish thought. I develop this assertion by examining Gershom Scholem’s early philosophical-theological essay ‘On Lament and Lamentation’ (1917), written as an epilogue to the book of Lamentations. Scholem’s principal claim is that laments epitomize a realm that does not represent concrete content and thus can allude to two radical categories of language: Divine revelation and absolute silence. The article argues that by emphasizing the absolute categories and neglecting the heterogenic content of laments, Scholem specifically suppresses the voices of women within the liturgical text. I illuminate Scholem’s oversight by comparatively reading his essay alongside the book of Lamentations and Midrash Lamentations Rabbah. The comparative reading demonstrates how the concepts which occupy Scholem (silence/revelation) are represented in Scriptures not only as absolute categories, but also through the bodies and voices of women.
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