German Neo-Pietism, the Nation and the Jews

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A01=Doron Avraham
Augsburg Confession
August Tholuck
Author_Doron Avraham
Awakened Christians
Category=JBSR
Category=NHD
Category=QRJ
Catholic Movement
Chiliastic Expectations
Christian conservatism
Christian State
Collegia Pietatis
Confessional Divide
Confessional Union
conversion and toleration
Ecumenical Christianity
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Frankfurt National Assembly
German Christian
German Christianity
German Ecumenism
German Nation State
German neo-Pietists
German Pietists
Halle Pietist
History of the Jews in Germany
Innerhalb Der Grenzen Der Blossen
Jewish emancipation debates
Jewish national political independence
Jewish Peoples
kinship communities
Modern Nationalism
National Identities Formation
Neo-Pietism
neo-Pietist views on Jewish nationhood
Nikolaus Ludwig Von Zinzendorf
Noble Estate Owners
Pietism
Pietist Centres
Pietist Movement
political conservatism
religious nationalism
religious-national synthesis
Restoration era Germany
Unitas Fratrum
United Diet
West Germany
Zinzendorf

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367503949
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book focuses on the national conceptualization of Judaism and Jews by German neo-Pietists from the early Restoration (1815) until the New Era (neue Ära, 1858-1861), at which point Prussia and other German states embarked on a liberal course. The book demonstrates how a certain understanding of nationalism by Awakened Christians, who were associated with political conservatism, was applied to themselves as belonging to a German nation, and correspondingly to Jews as members of a distinct Jewish nation. It argues that this kind of nationalization by neo-Pietists–among them theologians, intellectuals, and members of the agrarian aristocracy–was interwoven with their religion of the heart, and drew on a tradition of a community of kinship established by the earlier German Pietism since the late seventeenth century. The book sheds new light on the accommodation of nationalism by German Pietist conservatives, who so far were considered as opponents of the national idea. At the same time, it shows that their posture towards Jews was not merely anti-Semitic. It emerged from a specific religious-national synthesis, and aimed at an alternative solution to the Jewish Question, other than emancipation, in the form of Jewish national political independence.

Doron Avraham is a senior lecturer at the General History Department at Bar-Ilan University.

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