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Le philosophe pourra-t-il faire entendre sa difficile vérité ? " Le nationalisme se fonde sur l'idée que ce qui nous semble premier et légitime possède une puissance telle que nous devons le préférer à toute autre réalité. Ainsi le père est non seulement aimé comme tel mais il devient mon préféré dans l'ordre du monde. Vouloir garder cette préférence c'est être nationaliste. " A travers l'exploration des grands courants de la pensée juive de la nation et l'examen des principaux concepts à l'œuvre dans l'histoire juive (filiation, appartenance, exil, souci, noblesse ou royauté), Michaël Bar-Zvi entraîne dans l'aventure à la fois personnelle et collective du grand mouvement historique d'éveil et de rédemption : " Ni les tourments passagers ni les convulsions d'agonie d'un peuple mourant ne l'ont engendré, mais le malheur d'un destin ancien. "
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Zionism --- Zionism --- Jewish nationalism --- Labor Zionism --- Jews
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Jewish nationalism. --- Jews --- Jews --- History --- Historiography
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Jewish nationalism --- Jews --- Nationalism --- Patriotism --- Identity --- History
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In this volume, Arieh Saposnik examines the complicated relations between nationalism and religious (and non-religious) redemptive traditions through the case study of Zionism. He provides a new framework for understanding the central ideas of this movement and its relationship to traditional Jewish ideas, Christian thought, and modern secular messianisms. Providing a longue-durée and broad view of the central themes and motivations in the making of Zionism, Saposnik connects its intellectual history with the concrete development of the Zionist project in Israel in its cultural, social, and political history. Saposnik demonstrates how Zionism offers lessons for a politics in which human perfectibility continues to serve as a guiding light and as a counter-narrative to the contemporary politics of self-interest, self-promotion and 'post-truth.' This is a study that bears implications for our understanding of modernity, of space and place, history and historical trajectories, and the place of Jews and Judaism in the modern world.
Zionism --- Jewish nationalism. --- History --- Jews --- Nationalism --- Zionist movement --- Jewish nationalism --- Politics and government --- Restoration --- Zionism. --- History.
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Jewish nationalism --- Nationalisme juif --- Levinsohn, Isaac Baer, --- Contributions in Jewish nationalism.
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A collaboration of the world's leading contemporary Jewry scholars, this book explains how and why Jewish identity differs in various societies and regions and the impact of these variations on the theory and practice of Jewish education. The authors discuss differences that extend beyond such immediately obvious variations as language and dress. Included is an examination of what Jews believe they share and what sets them apart from others; what specific elements of Judaism, which conceptualizations, and which interpretations acquire special emphasis; and the extent to which, and the manner in which, Jews are to function as part of the larger societies in which they dwell.
Jews --- Identity --- Congresses --- United States --- Israel --- JEWISH RELIGIOUS EDUCATION --- JEWS --- JEWISH NATIONALISM --- RELIGION --- HISTORY --- Jewish Religious Education --- Jewish Nationalism --- Religion --- History --- Jewish religious education --- Jewish nationalism
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This volume engages diverse topics such as art, music, and radio broadcasting in the development of modern Jewish nationalism by leading scholars in their respective fields. It contains richly detailed studies that challenge existing historiography--from personal struggles with nationalism, to the lesser-known origins of the Balfour Declaration, from boisterous demonstrations on the streets of pre-World War I Galicia, to skirmishes between Jews in present-day Jerusalem. It examines how nationalism has worked in theory and practice for Jews and at times been fiercely resisted. Beginning with the memory of Theodor Herzl and his cohort at the London Zionist Congress of 1900, this book revisits the wider scene of Zionism's emergence, as we explore the imagination of, and the attempted national mobilization of Jewry throughout the twentieth century. Contributors include: Delphine Bechtel; Nachman Ben-Yehuda; Michael Berkowitz; Inka Bertz; Philip Bohlman; John M. Efron; Richard A. Freund; Francois Guesnet; Michael Löwy; Barbara Mann; Derek Penslar; James Renton; Aviel Roshwald; Joshua Shanes.
Jewish nationalism --- Jews --- Zionism --- Nationalism --- History --- Identity --- Politics and government
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Zionism. --- Zionism --- Jews --- Zionist movement --- Jewish nationalism --- Politics and government --- Restoration
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