Beyond Auschwitz
Post-Holocaust Jewish Thought in America
Morgan, Michael L.,
Professor of Jewish Studies and Philosophy,
Indiana University, Bloomington
Print publication date: 2001
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-514862-6 doi:10.1093/0195148622.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Auschwitz is the center of the twentieth century, its dark core, yet, in the postwar years in America few intellectuals dared to come to grips with the horror and the suffering. Jewish theologians too were slow to respond until, in the turbulent years of the sixties and beyond, a small number of Jewish thinkers came to realize that the survival of Judaism and continued Jewish life require first and foremost confronting Auschwitz; looking into the abyss had become unavoidable. In this book, Michael Morgan tells the story of these theologians, and offers the first comprehensive overview of post-Holocaust Jewish theology. He gives an account of the encounter with the death camps in the postwar writings of figures such as Hannah Arendt, Elie Wiesel, and Primo Levi and describes the role of the Six Day War in 1967 on the development and reception of post-Holocaust Jewish thought. In chapters on each of the central thinkers (Richard Rubinstein, Eliezer Berkovits, Irving Greenberg, Arthur Cohen, and Emil Fackenheim), he analyzes the way they have struggled with the dialectic of history and identity, and with the threat of radical rupture. Throughout the book, the intellectual developments are set in their historical context and there are chapters on the reception of post-Holocaust Jewish thought and its legacy for today. This is a book of philosophical and theological analysis as well as a work of intellectual history and will interest a wide spectrum of readers.
Keywords: American theologians, Arthur Cohen, Auschwitz, Eliezer Berkovits, Emil Fackenheim, history, Holocaust, Irving Greenberg, Jewish history, Jewish theologians, Jewish theology, Judaism, Richard Rubinstein Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter One.
The Holocaust and the Intellectuals of the Fifties and Sixties
Chapter Two.
Responses to Auschwitz and the Literary Imagination
Chapter Three.
Jewish Theology in Postwar America
Chapter Four.
The Early Stage: The Sixties
Chapter Five.
The Six Day War and American Jewish Life
Chapter Six.
Richard Rubenstein and the New Paganism
Chapter Seven.
Eliezer Berkovits and the Tenacity of Faith
Chapter Eight.
Irving Greenberg and the Post-Holocaust Voluntary Covenant
Chapter Nine.
Arthur Cohen and the Holocaust as Tremendum
Chapter Ten.
Emil Fackenheim: Fidelity and Recovery in the Post-Holocaust Epoch
Chapter Eleven.
The Reception of Post-Holocaust Jewish Thought
Chapter Twelve.
Postmodernism, Tradition, Memory: The Contemporary Legacy of Post-Holocaust Jewish Thought
Bibliography
Index
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