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On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism by Gershom Scholem
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On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism

by Gershom Scholem

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200128,543 (4.3)1
Recently added byefeltonf, BethElohim, gbenaim, martyn50, DavidRankine, SekhetBastRa, prosperosbook, edhalter, eruuf, private library
Legacy LibrariesDanilo Kiš
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A good clear introduction to a very complex topic lately abused by casual practioners. I offered to lend this book to one modern "Kabbalist" who told me her group had more fun making it up. At least she was honest about it. I understand Idel's book is considered
an important revision of Scholem. ( )
  antiquary | Aug 20, 2007 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0805210512, Paperback)

Gershom Scholem, who died in 1982, remains the biggest gun in kabbalah scholarship, and On the Kabbalah and its Symbolism is perhaps his most accessible book on the subject. It contains definitive essays on the relation of the Torah to Jewish mysticism, the mythology of the kabbalah, and the place of Jewish mystics in the Jewish community. This book helped reinvigorate 20th-century Jewish studies with an awareness of the living reality of God, after the 19th century's more astringent scholarly emphasis on law and philosophy. It shows how Jewish mystics have been less concerned with adherence to orthodoxy than their Christian counterparts, and freer in their expression of the divine aspects of eroticism. Furthermore, Scholem offers great insight regarding the ways that kabbalah has not only threatened the authority of institutional religion, but also served as a source of its vitality. --Michael Joseph Gross

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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