Through a Speculum That Shines
Our rough guess is there are 115,500 words in this book.
At a pace averaging 250 words per minute, this book will take 7 hours and 42 minutes to read. With a half hour per day, this will take 16 days to read.
How long will it take you?
This book will take an estimated to read at a reading speed averaging words per minute. With 30 minutes per day, this will take to read.
Enter your reading speedYou can take one of our WPM reading speed tests to find your reading speed.
Create a free account to track your reading progress, build your reading list, and set reading goals.
Word Count
115,500 words, Guess
Page Count
462 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- ISBN-100691017220
- ISBN-139780691017228
- LibraryThing1696302
- Goodreads1109536
- Better World Books9780691017228
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL7756408M
Classifications
- LCCBM526
- DDC296.7/12/0902
- LCCBM526 .W65 1994
Description
A comprehensive treatment of visionary experience in some of the main texts of Jewish mysticism, this book reveals the overwhelmingly visual nature of religious experience in Jewish spirituality from antiquity through the late Middle Ages. Using phenomenological and critical historical tools, Wolfson examines Jewish mystical texts from late antiquity, pre-kabbalistic sources from the tenth to the twelfth centuries, and twelfth- and thirteenth-century kabbalistic literature. His work demonstrates that the sense of sight assumes an epistemic priority in these writings, reflecting and building upon those scriptural passages that affirm the visual nature of revelatory experience. Moreover, the author reveals an androcentric eroticism in the scopic mentality of Jewish mystics, which placed the externalized and representable form, the phallus, at the center of the visual encounter. . In the visionary experience, as Wolfson describes it, imagination serves a primary function, transmuting sensory data and rational concepts into symbols of those things beyond sense and reason. In this view, the experience of a vision is inseparable from the process of interpretation. Fundamentally challenging the conventional distinction between experience and exegesis, revelation and interpretation, Wolfson argues that for the mystics themselves, the study of texts occasioned a visual experience of the divine located in the imagination of the mystical interpreter. Thus he shows how Jewish mystics preserved the invisible transcendence of God without doing away with the visual dimension of belief.
First Sentence
One of the seminal problems in theology and religious philosophy is the possibility of a visionary experience of God.
Excerpt
One of the seminal problems in theology and religious philosophy is the possibility of a visionary experience of God.
Subjects
Topics
Other Editions
- Through a Speculum That Shines
Similar Books
Origins of the Kabbalah
Gershom Scholem ; edited by R.J. Zwi Werblowsky ; translated from the German by Allan Arkush.
Trajectories in Near Eastern apocalyptic: a postrabbinic Jewish apocalypse reader
John C. Reeves.
Jews, Germans, and Allies: close encounters in occupied Germany
Atina Grossmann.
Survival in Auschwitz: the Nazi assault on humanity
Primo Levi ; translated from the Italian by Stuart Woolf ; including "A conversation with Primo Levi by Philip Roth".
Reader Reviews
No reviews yet for this book.
Be the first to share your thoughts!