Since the 1970s, Buber has often been suspected of being a Volkish thinker. This essay reconsiders the affinity of Buber’s late writings with Volkish ideology. It examines the allegations against Buber’s Volkish thought in light of his later biblical and Hasidic writings. By illuminating the ideological affinity between these two modes of thought, the essay explains how Buber aims to depart from the dangers of myth without rejecting myth as such. I argue that Buber’s relationship to myth can help us to explain his critique of nationalism. My basic argument is that in his struggle with hyper-nationalism, Buber follows the Baal Shem Tov and his struggle against Sabbateanism. Like the Besht, Buber does not reject myth, but se...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of divine ru...
M. Buber and G. Scholem: two perspectives on Eastern European Hasidism Abstract: East European Hasid...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of...
Hasidism, a mid-eighteenth century mysticism of Polish Jewry, represents for Buber the heart of both...
Against the background of the young Martin Buber\u27s discovery of a communal orientation in the Zio...
Feature: The philosophy of Martin Buber and his biblical hermeneutics: between Germanness and Jewish...
In this article the authors outline the personal history and thoughts of Martin Buber. Buber’s Judai...
This paper aims to shed some light on the association between the Bible and political philosophy in ...
Martin Buber was a source of inspiration for a generation of young German Jews at the beginning of t...
The concept of "theopolitics" appears throughout the biblical writings of Martin Buber, but has been...
This edition of Martin Buber's Hasidic works focuses on a fundamental topic in Buber's complex and m...
Feature: The philosophy of Martin Buber and his biblical hermeneutics: between Germanness and Jewish...
This essay uses both published and archival material to reconstruct the ideological and social conte...
There is a legal requirement that schools engage with the spiritual aspects of education, which enco...
After a century-long struggle, the German-Jewish community achieved emancipation in 1871 only to fac...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of divine ru...
M. Buber and G. Scholem: two perspectives on Eastern European Hasidism Abstract: East European Hasid...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of...
Hasidism, a mid-eighteenth century mysticism of Polish Jewry, represents for Buber the heart of both...
Against the background of the young Martin Buber\u27s discovery of a communal orientation in the Zio...
Feature: The philosophy of Martin Buber and his biblical hermeneutics: between Germanness and Jewish...
In this article the authors outline the personal history and thoughts of Martin Buber. Buber’s Judai...
This paper aims to shed some light on the association between the Bible and political philosophy in ...
Martin Buber was a source of inspiration for a generation of young German Jews at the beginning of t...
The concept of "theopolitics" appears throughout the biblical writings of Martin Buber, but has been...
This edition of Martin Buber's Hasidic works focuses on a fundamental topic in Buber's complex and m...
Feature: The philosophy of Martin Buber and his biblical hermeneutics: between Germanness and Jewish...
This essay uses both published and archival material to reconstruct the ideological and social conte...
There is a legal requirement that schools engage with the spiritual aspects of education, which enco...
After a century-long struggle, the German-Jewish community achieved emancipation in 1871 only to fac...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of divine ru...
M. Buber and G. Scholem: two perspectives on Eastern European Hasidism Abstract: East European Hasid...
The current article revisits the tenuous relationship between Martin Buber’s conception of...