“犹太人”、民族与同化:《旧约》与德国与荷兰新教思想中“他者”的塑造

Mariëtta Van der Tol
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要本文讨论了19世纪德国和荷兰新教对新兴民族国家反思中取代主义姿态的重新定位。历史上,基督教思想经常将“犹太人”视为“新生的基督徒”。自17世纪以来,新教神学家也在摩西之约的律法主义的基础上考虑了神学他者的可能性,其中古代圣经中的以色列及其文化礼仪被视为象征。在现代民族的语境中,德国和荷兰的新教思想接受了圣经国家的这种类型的他者,将现代犹太人构建为现代民族的“外邦人”。作为“外邦人”,“犹太人”仍然是终极他者的化身,然而作为“新生的基督徒”,现代犹太人开始面临被同化的无情要求。这个难题导致了这个国家想象中的根本紧张,即他者模式和归属感结构之间的紧张,这种紧张远远超出了反犹主义,特别是在种族主义和伊斯兰恐惧症固有的他者模式中。
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The “Jew,” the Nation and Assimilation: The Old Testament and the Fashioning of the “Other” in German and Dutch Protestant Thought
Abstract This article discusses a reorientation of supersessionist postures in German and Dutch Protestant reflection on emerging nation states in the nineteenth-century. Historically, Christian thought often othered “the Jew” as the “nascent Christian.” Since the seventeenth-century, Protestant theologians also entertained the possibility of theological othering on the basis of the legalism of the Mosaic covenant, of which ancient biblical Israel and its cultural liturgies were regarded as a token. In the context of the modern nation, German and Dutch Protestant thought entertained this typological othering of biblical nationhood to construct the modern Jew as “Gentile” to the modern nation. As “Gentile,” “the Jew” remains the embodiment of the ultimate other, yet as “nascent Christian,” modern Jews begin to face an unrelenting demand to assimilate. This conundrum contributed to a fundamental tension in the imaginary of the nation, namely between patterns of othering and structures of belonging, echoing far beyond antisemitism, and especially in patterns of othering that are inherent to racism and Islamophobia.
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