The Philosophical Pathos of Susan Taubes offers a detailed analysis of an extraordinary figure in the twentieth-century history of Jewish thought, Western philosophy, and the study of religion. Drawing on close readings of Susan Taubes’s writings, including her correspondence with Jacob Taubes, scholarly essays, literary compositions, and poems, Elliot R. Wolfson plumbs the depths of the tragic sensibility that shaped her worldview, hovering between the poles of nihilism and hope.
By placing Susan Taubes in dialogue with a host of other seminal thinkers, Wolfson illumines how she presciently explored the hypernomian status of Jewish ritual and belief after the Holocaust; the theopolitical challenges of Zionism and the dangers of ethnonationalism; the antitheological theology and gnostic repercussions of Heideggerian thought; the mystical atheism and apophaticism of tragedy in Simone Weil; and the understanding of poetry as the means to face the faceless and to confront the silence of death in the temporal overcoming of time through time. Wolfson delves into the abyss that molded Susan Taubes’s mytheological thinking, making a powerful case for the continued relevance of her work to the study of philosophy and religion today.
Mục lục
Introduction: Memory and Heeding the Murmuring of the Israelites
1. Ghosts of Judaism and the Serpent Devouring Its Own Tale
2. Zionism and the Sacramental Danger of Nationalism
3. Gnosis and the Covert Theology of Antitheology: Heidegger, Apocalypticism, and Gnosticism
4. Tragedy, Mystical Atheism, and the Apophaticism of Simone Weil
5. Facing the Faceless: Poetic Truth, Temporal Oblivion, and the Silence of Death
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Elliot R. Wolfson is Marsha and Jay Glazer Endowed Chair in Jewish Studies and Distinguished Professor of Religion at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His previous books include
Suffering Time: Philosophical, Kabbalistic, and Ḥasidic Reflections on Temporality (2021),
Heidegger and Kabbalah: Hidden Gnosis and the Path of Poiēsis (2019), and
The Duplicity of Philosophy’s Shadow: Heidegger, Nazism, and the Jewish Other (2018).