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Lament in Jewish Thought : Philosophical, Theological, and Literary Perspectives
Translation of Sha’ali Serufa: A Medieval Lamentation
edited_book
Author(s):
Gershom Scholem
Publication date:
January 26 2014
Publisher:
DE GRUYTER
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There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
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Trivent Medieval
Author and book information
Book Chapter
DOI:
10.1515/9783110339963.340
SO-VID:
acff2a32-11d8-46d1-99f4-b7a076767b78
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Book chapters
Job’s Lament
“Incline thine ear unto me, and hear my speech”: Scholem, Benjamin, and Cohen on Lament
Paradoxes of Lament: Benjamin and Hamlet
Preface
Ezekiel Chapter 19: A Lamentation for Israel’s Last Princes
Acknowledgments
Eikhah and the Stance of Lamentation
Translation of Ezekiel Chapter 19: A Lamentation for Israel’s Last Princes
Scholem’s postscript in the manuscript version
“Movement of Language” and Transience: Lament, Mourning, and the Tradition of Elegy in Early Scholem
Words and Corpses: Celan’s “Tenebrae” between Gadamer and Scholem
Frontmatter
Frequently Used Abbreviations
The Unfallen Silence: Kinah and the Other Origin of Language
Silence, Solitude, and Suicide: Gershom Scholem’s Paradoxical Theory of Lamentation
Translation of Sha’ali Serufa: A Medieval Lamentation
The Role of Lamentation for Scholem’s Theory of Poetry and Language
Bibliography
Translators’ Introduction
Women’s Oral Laments: Corpus and Text – The Body in the Text
Bemerkungen zur Klage
The Ghost of the Poet: Lament in Walter Benjamin’s Early Poetry, Theory, and Translation
Bodies Performing in Ruins: The Lamenting Mother in Ancient Hebrew Texts
On Lament and Lamentation
Notes on Contributors
A Medieval Lamentation
Contents
The Tradition in Ruins: Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem on Language and Lament
Ein Menachem: On Lament and Consolation
The Silent Syllable: On Franz Rosenzweig’s Translation of Yehuda Halevi’s Liturgical Poems
Translation of Job Chapter 3: Job’s Lament
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