Hasidism and Politics: The Kingdom of Poland, 1815-1864

Author:   Marcin Wodziński
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
ISBN:  

9781906764944


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   01 September 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Hasidism and Politics: The Kingdom of Poland, 1815-1864


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Author:   Marcin Wodziński
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
Imprint:   The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.367kg
ISBN:  

9781906764944


ISBN 10:   1906764948
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   01 September 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.
Language:   Polish

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Note on Transliteration, Place Names, and Sources List of Abbreviations Introduction 1 To 'Civilize' the Jews: Polish Debates on the Reform of the Jewish People, 1789- 1830 The Framework of the Debate * Diagnosis * The Goal * Measures: What are 'Civil Christians?' * What does 'to Civilize' Mean? * Conclusions 2 Origins: Controversies over Hasidic Shtiblekh Before the Congress Kingdom * Nameless: The First Ruling on Hasidic Shtiblekh * Investigating the Kitajowcy in Plock * Michels: Shtiblekh, Mikveh, and Burial Societies * Conclusions 3 The Investigation of 1823-4 Hussites: Beginnings of the Investigation * Hasidism is Banned * Counteroffensive * Stanislaw Staszic against the Tsadikim * Hasidism Delivered: Conclusions 4 Between Words and Actions State Politics and Local Politicians * Silent Turning Point : Hasidism in the Politics of the Kingdom after 1831 * The Last Investigation * Ignorance, Inertia, Frustration * Who Profited? On the Ostensible Equality of Hasidism * Epilogue: The 1860s * Conclusions 5 The Hasidim Strike Back: Development of Hasidic Political Involvements Beginnings: Berek Sonnenberg and his Circle * Offensive: Meir Rotenberg of Opatow * Triumph: Isaac Kalisz of Warka * The Third Phase * Digression: Corruption * The Local Context: Conclusions 6 Communal Dimensions of Hasidic Politics Who? Agents of Hasidic Communal Politics * Whom? Protagonists * Why? Goals * How? Means * Local or Universal? * Conclusions 7 Haskalah and Government Policy towards Hasidism The Role of Hasidism in the Political Activity of the Polish Maskilim * Myth and Reality in the Role of the Maskilim * How did Maskilic and Hasidic Shtadlanim Differ? * Conclusions Conclusion Bibliography Index

Reviews

'The study of Hasidism ... has been transformed recently by a new generation of researchers who have mined Polish archives for documentation on the movement. Professor Wodzinski is one of the most notable of this group and this monograph is a path-breaking contribution to the understanding of how Hasidism operated in Poland in the first half of the nineteenth century and how it spread ... crucial to any collection that deals with Hasidism and east European Jewish life but it is no less important for the study of religion and politics in general.' Shaul Stampfer, Religious Studies Review


`A worthy successor to the author's path-breaking Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland . . . one of the leading scholars in the field, and he brings to his subject a wide familiarity with Polish and Jewish sources in Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish, and other languages and, most notably, the fruits of his thorough combing of national, regional, and local Polish archives . . . He has thus been able to free the historical narrative from the long-regnant approaches of Simon Dubnow and Raphael Mahler, looking afresh at the complex and developing relationships between Polish authorities and Polish Jewry in general, and the rapidly expanding Hasidic movement in particular . . . a notable addition to the growing number of studies focusing on the long-neglected topic of Hasidism in the nineteenth century . . . a carefully nuanced and contextualized portrait of a complex topic that in earlier historiography suffered from stereotyping and oversimplification . . . an excellent book that should interest students of Polish and Jewish history alike.' - Gershon Bacon, Slavic Review `The study of Hasidism . . . has been transformed recently by a new generation of researchers who have mined Polish archives for documentation on the movement. Professor Wodzinski is one of the most notable of this group and this monograph is a path-breaking contribution to the understanding of how Hasidism operated in Poland in the first half of the nineteenth century and how it spread . . . crucial to any collection that deals with Hasidism and east European Jewish life but it is no less important for the study of religion and politics in general.' - Shaul Stampfer, Religious Studies Review `Marcin Wodzinski, in another masterful book on Hasidism, turns his expert attention to analyzing the political history of the Kingdom of Poland and its relationship to the Hasidic movement . . . best suited to the scholar or serious student.' - David Tesler, AJL Reviews


`A worthy successor to the author's path-breaking Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland . . . one of the leading scholars in the field, and he brings to his subject a wide familiarity with Polish and Jewish sources in Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish, and other languages and, most notably, the fruits of his thorough combing of national, regional, and local Polish archives . . . He has thus been able to free the historical narrative from the long-regnant approaches of Simon Dubnow and Raphael Mahler, looking afresh at the complex and developing relationships between Polish authorities and Polish Jewry in general, and the rapidly expanding Hasidic movement in particular . . . a notable addition to the growing number of studies focusing on the long-neglected topic of Hasidism in the nineteenth century . . . a carefully nuanced and contextualized portrait of a complex topic that in earlier historiography suffered from stereotyping and oversimplification . . . an excellent book that should interest students of Polish and Jewish history alike.'- Gershon Bacon, Slavic Review `The study of Hasidism . . . has been transformed recently by a new generation of researchers who have mined Polish archives for documentation on the movement. Professor Wodzinski is one of the most notable of this group and this monograph is a path-breaking contribution to the understanding of how Hasidism operated in Poland in the first half of the nineteenth century and how it spread . . . crucial to any collection that deals with Hasidism and east European Jewish life but it is no less important for the study of religion and politics in general.'- Shaul Stampfer, Religious Studies Review `Marcin Wodzinski, in another masterful book on Hasidism, turns his expert attention to analyzing the political history of the Kingdom of Poland and its relationship to the Hasidic movement . . . best suited to the scholar or serious student.'- David Tesler, AJL Reviews


'Marcin Wodzinski, in another masterful book on Hasidism, turns his expert attention to analyzing the political history of the Kingdom of Poland and its relationship to the Hasidic movement ... best suited to the scholar or serious student.' David Tesler, AJL Reviews 'The study of Hasidism ... has been transformed recently by a new generation of researchers who have mined Polish archives for documentation on the movement. Professor Wodzinski is one of the most notable of this group and this monograph is a path-breaking contribution to the understanding of how Hasidism operated in Poland in the first half of the nineteenth century and how it spread ... crucial to any collection that deals with Hasidism and east European Jewish life but it is no less important for the study of religion and politics in general.' Shaul Stampfer, Religious Studies Review 'A worthy successor to the author's path-breaking Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland ... one of the leading scholars in the field, and he brings to his subject a wide familiarity with Polish and Jewish sources in Hebrew, Yiddish, Polish, and other languages and, most notably, the fruits of his thorough combing of national, regional, and local Polish archives ... He has thus been able to free the historical narrative from the long-regnant approaches of Simon Dubnow and Raphael Mahler, looking afresh at the complex and developing relationships between Polish authorities and Polish Jewry in general, and the rapidly expanding Hasidic movement in particular ... a notable addition to the growing number of studies focusing on the long-neglected topic of Hasidism in the nineteenth century ... a carefully nuanced and contextualized portrait of a complex topic that in earlier historiography suffered from stereotyping and oversimplification ... an excellent book that should interest students of Polish and Jewish history alike.' Gershon Bacon, Slavic Review


Author Information

Marcin Wodziński is Professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Wrocław.

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