IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies Pub Date : 2021-01-12 DOI:10.1093/obo/9780199840731-0200
Jessica J. Olson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

内森·伯恩鲍姆(生于1864-d)1937年),也以笔名马蒂亚斯·阿切尔(“另一个马蒂亚斯”)而为人所知,是一名记者、犹太民族主义理论家和政治活动家。伯恩鲍姆是世俗犹太民族主义和东正教政治组织出现的先驱。伯恩鲍姆的意识形态深受维也纳反犹太主义高涨的影响,并被他所谓的“同化狂热”(Assimilationssucht)所疏远。伯恩鲍姆的意识形态早期形成于他职业生涯中发展的两个主题:一是相信存在一种内在的、独特的犹太人身份,二是这种身份可以被激活,作为一种解决压迫欧洲犹太人的方法。伯恩鲍姆的早期作品整合了中欧民族主义的模型,这些模型通过摩西·赫斯、佩雷兹·斯摩伦斯金和利昂·平斯克的作品过滤。1882年俄罗斯发生反犹太暴力事件后,伯恩鲍姆和维也纳大学的其他犹太学生成立了中欧最早的犹太民族主义组织前进党。他在中欧犹太民族主义者中有着重要的影响力,他对年轻一代的“文化”犹太复国主义者产生了重大影响。在19世纪90年代早期,他创造了“犹太复国主义”(Zionismus)一词来描述以巴勒斯坦为导向的犹太民族主义。当西奥多·赫茨尔在1896年进入犹太复国主义圈子时,他把伯恩鲍姆和在他之前参加这场运动的几乎所有人都排挤在外,但伯恩鲍姆关于真正犹太人身份本质的观点已经在演变。他最终从内部和外部对犹太复国主义进行了批评,并得出结论认为,在民间习俗、意第绪语和东欧犹太人的社区中,已经存在着有机的犹太人身份。作为这项工作的延伸,他在1908年领导组织了第一次意第绪语会议。会议结束后,伯恩鲍姆加深了他对意第绪语和东欧犹太文化的研究,并越来越多地将他的思想转向精神和宗教问题。第一次世界大战爆发后,伯恩鲍姆宣布自己是一名“ba 'al teshuva”,即悔罪归来的人,回归遵守律法的犹太教。他受到了阿古达的欢迎,他作为记者和活动家的技能在阿古达的组织中得到了运用。伯恩鲍姆彻底改变了他对犹太人身份基础的理解。伯恩鲍姆坚持将犹太人的真实性作为犹太人凝聚力的唯一途径,他拒绝了他早期对犹太人身份的种族民族主义理解,取而代之的是东正教的宗教仪式和对托拉的信仰。他与哈西德派的宗教信仰结盟,这是他对东欧犹太人崇拜的有机延伸。这一转变为他赢得了东正教世界的尊重,也为他身后的世俗民族主义者赢得了嘲笑,伯恩鲍姆认为他的改变与他对犹太人真实性的看法是一致的。随着欧洲犹太人的处境在20世纪20年代末和30年代的衰落,伯恩鲍姆对犹太人在宗教身份之外生活的可能性的悲观看法得到了证实,并在他的余生中以这种方式写作。1937年,他在荷兰的斯海弗宁根去世。
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Nathan Birnbaum
Nathan Birnbaum (b. 1864–d. 1937), also known by the pseudonym Mathias Acher (“another Mathias”), was a journalist, theorist of Jewish nationalism, and political activist. Birnbaum was a pioneer in the emergence of both secular Jewish nationalism and Orthodox political organization. Deeply affected by his exposure to rising anti-Semitism in fin-de-siècle Vienna and alienated by what he would term “assimilation mania” (Assimilationssucht), Birnbaum’s ideology was shaped early by two themes that developed throughout his career: belief that there was an intrinsic, unique Jewish identity, and that this identity could be activated as a solution to the oppression afflicting European Jews. Birnbaum’s early work integrated models of central European nationalism filtered through the writings of Moses Hess, Peretz Smolenskin, and Leon Pinsker. In the wake of anti-Jewish violence in Russia in 1882, Birnbaum and other Jewish students at Vienna University founded Kadimah, the earliest Jewish nationalist organization in central Europe. He cultivated an important presence among central European Jewish nationalists, and he was a significant influence on a young generation of “cultural” Zionists. In the early 1890s, he coined the term “Zionism” (Zionismus) to describe Palestine-oriented Jewish nationalism. When Theodor Herzl arrived in Zionist circles in 1896, he sidelined Birnbaum along with nearly everyone else who had preceded him in the movement, but Birnbaum’s opinion on the nature of authentic Jewish identity was already evolving. He eventually became an internal, and ultimately outside, critic of Zionism, concluding that an organic Jewish identity already existed in the folkways, Yiddish language, and communities of eastern European Jews. As an extension of this, he led in organizing the first conference of the Yiddish language in 1908. In the aftermath of the conference, Birnbaum deepened his engagement with the Yiddish language and eastern European Jewish culture and increasingly turned his thoughts to issues of spirituality and religion. After the outbreak of the First World War, Birnbaum announced himself a “ba’al teshuva,” a penitent returnee to Torah-observant Judaism. He was embraced by the Agudah, and his skills as a journalist and activist were put to use in Agudah organizing. Now Birnbaum revolutionized his understanding of the foundation of Jewish identity. Maintaining the ideal of Jewish authenticity as the only route to Jewish cohesion, Birnbaum rejected his earlier ethno-nationalist understanding of Jewish identity, replacing it with Orthodox religious observance and belief in the Torah. He aligned himself with a Hasidic religiosity that was an organic extension of his admiration for eastern European Jewry. A transformation that earned him respect in the Orthodox world and derision among the secular nationalists he had left behind, Birnbaum considered his change consistent with his views on Jewish authenticity. As the situation of European Jewry declined in the late 1920s and 1930s, Birnbaum felt vindicated in his dim view of the possibility of Jewish life outside of a religious identity, and wrote in this vein for the rest of his life. He died in Scheveningen, The Netherlands, in 1937.
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来源期刊
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
20 weeks
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