Ben : sonship and Jewish mysticism

by Moshe Idel

Paperback, 2007

Publication

Imprint: London ; New York : [Jerusalem] : Continuum ; Shalom Hartman Institute, 2007. Responsibility: Moshe Idel. OCLC Number: 495357632. Physical: xi, 725 pages ; 24 cm. Features: Includes bibliographic references, index.

Call number

History / Idel

Barcode

BK-07492

ISBN

9780826496652

CSS Library Notes

Description: While many aspects of Sonship have been analyzed in books on Judaism, this book attempts to address the category of Sonship in Jewish mystical literature as a whole - a category much more vast than ever imagined. It aims to point out the many instances where Jewish thinkers resorted to concepts of Sonship and their conceptual backgrounds.

Contents: Righteousness, theophorism and sonship in Rabbinic and heikhalot literatures --
The Son (of God) in Ashkenazi forms of esotericism --
Son as an intellectual/eschatological entity in ecstatic Kabbalah --
The sexualized Son of God in the theosophical-theurgical Kabbalah --
Christological and non-Christological sons of God in the Italian Renaissance and their reverberations --
The Son of God as a righteous in HĚŁasidism.

FY2017 /

Physical description

xi, 725 p.; 24 cm

Awards

National Jewish Book Award (Winner — Scholarship — 2007)

Description

"Moshe Idel increasingly is seen as having achieved the eminence of Gershom Scholem in the study of Jewish mysticism. Ben, his book on the concept of sonship in Kabbalah, is an extraordinary work of scholarship and imaginative surmise. If an intellectual Judaism is to survive, then Idel becomes essential reading, whatever your own spiritual allegiances."-Harold Bloom, Sterling Professor of Humanities, Yale University While many aspects of sonship have been analyzed in books on Judaism, this book, Moshe Idel's magnum opus, constitutes the first attempt to address the category of sonship in Jewish mystical literature as a whole. Idel's aim is to point out the many instances where Jewish thinkers resorted to concepts of sonship and their conceptual backgrounds, and thus to show the existence of a wide variety of understandings of hypostatic sons in Judaism. Through this survey, not only can the mystical forms of sonship in Judaism be better understood, but the concept of sonship in religion in general can also be enriched.… (more)

Language

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