1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910821779603321

Autore

Lazier Benjamin <1971->

Titolo

God interrupted : heresy and the European imagination between the world wars / / Benjamin Lazier

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Princeton, N.J., : Princeton University Press, c2009

ISBN

1-4008-3765-0

1-282-96478-X

9786612964787

Edizione

[Course Book]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (271 p.)

Disciplina

296.3/110904

Soggetti

God (Judaism) - History of doctrines - 20th century

Jewish philosophy - History - 20th century

Heresy - History - 20th century

Pantheism - History - 20th century

Gnosticism - History - 20th century

Europe Intellectual life 20th century

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.

Nota di contenuto

The Gnostic return -- God interrupted: Romans in Weimar -- Overcoming Gnosticism -- After Auschwitz, earth -- Pantheism revisited -- The Pantheism controversy -- From God to nature -- Natural right and Judaism -- Redemption through sin -- Jewish Gnosticism -- Raising Pantheism -- From nihilism to nothingness -- Scholem's golem.

Sommario/riassunto

Could the best thing about religion be the heresies it spawns? Leading intellectuals in interwar Europe thought so. They believed that they lived in a world made derelict by God's absence and the interruption of his call. In response, they helped resurrect gnosticism and pantheism, the two most potent challenges to the monotheistic tradition. In God Interrupted, Benjamin Lazier tracks the ensuing debates about the divine across confessions and disciplines. He also traces the surprising afterlives of these debates in postwar arguments about the environment, neoconservative politics, and heretical forms of Jewish identity. In lively, elegant prose, the book reorients the intellectual



history of the era. God Interrupted also provides novel accounts of three German-Jewish thinkers whose ideas, seminal to fields typically regarded as wildly unrelated, had common origins in debates about heresy between the wars. Hans Jonas developed a philosophy of biology that inspired European Greens and bioethicists the world over. Leo Strauss became one of the most important and controversial political theorists of the twentieth century. Gershom Scholem, the eminent scholar of religion, radically recast what it means to be a Jew. Together they help us see how talk about God was adapted for talk about nature, politics, technology, and art. They alert us to the abiding salience of the divine to Europeans between the wars and beyond--even among those for whom God was long missing or dead.