哈斯卡拉(犹太启蒙)文学

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Amir Banbaji
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Haskalah运动在18世纪的最后二十年在普鲁士变得与众不同。在18世纪早期,它在意大利和中欧有重要的早期先行者。在柏林和Königsberg经历了风暴之后,它在新的政治和经济机会的支持下向东移动。到19世纪80年代初,随着俄罗斯南部反犹太人大屠杀后涌现出的大量新思想的兴起,它在东欧开始了自己的进程。然而,这场运动在中东和北非有许多分支,甚至在欧洲犹太民族主义兴起之后,一直延续到20世纪上半叶。学者们通常认为,自18世纪早期到中期以来,哈斯卡拉运动及其文学是导致欧洲内外犹太人生活转型和现代化的主要因素。Haskalah(在希伯来语中是知识、智慧和学习的意思)通常被描述为与世俗化和欧洲启蒙运动有着深刻的联系。然而,一旦哈斯卡拉学者开始将该运动与启蒙运动的各种批评联系起来,这种相当自动的识别就成为了争论的主题。哈斯卡拉文学的定义也发生了如此重大的变化。大多数20世纪早期到中期的文学史学家将其定义为现代希伯来文学的第一个实例,哈斯卡拉研究的创始学者将其文学定义为由欧洲精英男性用希伯来语写作,接受和形成的文学。这个定义最近被扩大了,很可能改变了“Haskalah”最内在的含义。哈斯卡拉文学现在包括用意第绪语和其他犹太语言写的作品,它包括妇女的写作和阅读实践,以及在北非和中东写的哈斯卡拉作品的详细历史。最后,在启蒙运动研究新发展的刺激下,哈斯卡拉被许多人视为关于世俗化、现代化和启蒙批判的竞争观点的游乐场。因此,哈斯卡拉研究领域继续发展,因为学者们重新审视了他们对其历史意义的最基本假设。该领域的创始范式确立了这样一种观念,即这是对犹太人传统过去的大胆突破,是犹太人回归世界或欧洲历史的预兆。自20世纪80年代末以来,这种令人振奋的危危感已经被一种更为温和的哈斯卡拉观所取代,因为社会和知识历史学家开始更加强调maskilim(哈斯卡拉的支持者)试图将犹太经文和传统与欧洲启蒙运动的主要信条相调和。这种方法再次受到学者们的挑战,他们试图证明,maskilim(或他们的文本)往往是启蒙运动和现代性的高效批评者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment) Literature
The Haskalah movement became distinguishable in Prussia during the last two decades of the 18th century. It had significant early precursors in Italy and central Europe during the earlier 18th century. After its stormy beginnings in Berlin and Königsberg it moved eastward, supported by new political and economic opportunities. It ran its course in eastern Europe by the early 1880s, with the rise of an avalanche of new ideas that came into being in the aftermath of anti-Jewish pogroms in the South of Russia. Nevertheless, the movement had many subsequent offshoots in the Middle East and North Africa, even after the rise of European Jewish nationalism, and well into the first half of the 20th century. Scholars usually consider the Haskalah movement and its literature a major factor in the process leading to the transformation and modernization of Jewish life, both inside and outside Europe, since the early to mid-18th century. Commonly translated as “Jewish Enlightenment,” the Haskalah (meaning, in Hebrew, knowledge, wisdom, and learning) is often depicted as having deep affiliation with secularization and European enlightenment. This rather automatic identification, however, became a subject of debate once scholars of Haskalah began to tie the movement to various strands of critiques of enlightenment. Such significant changes also befell the definition of Haskalah literature. Defined by most early- to mid-20th-century literary historians as a first instance of modern Hebrew literature, the founding scholars of Haskalah studies defined its literature as written, received, and formed by European elite males, who wrote in Hebrew. This definition has recently been broadened in ways that are likely to transform the innermost meaning of the Haskalah. Haskalah literature now includes works written in Yiddish as well as other Jewish languages, and it encompasses women’s writing and practices of reading, as well as detailed histories of Haskalah works written in North Africa and the Middle East. Finally, stimulated by new developments in the study of Enlightenment, the Haskalah is viewed by many as a playground for competing views on secularization, modernization, and the critique of Enlightenment. Thus, the field of Haskalah studies continues to evolve, as scholars revisit their most fundamental assumptions regarding its historical significance. The founding paradigm of the field established the perception that this was a daring break with Jewish traditional past and a harbinger of Jewish return to the universal or European history. This sense of exhilarating crisis has been replaced since the late 1980s with a more moderate view of Haskalah, as social and intellectual historians began to put greater stress on the maskilim’s (proponents of the Haskalah) attempt to reconcile Jewish scriptures and traditions with the main tenets of the European Enlightenment. This approach has been challenged yet again by scholars seeking to show that maskilim—or their texts—were often highly effective critics of Enlightenment and modernity.
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来源期刊
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
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20 weeks
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