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Beth Hawkins focuses on the problematic faith in the works of Kafka, Celan, and Jabs to reevaluate the notions of God and covenant in light of Nietzsche's death of Godhypothesis. the divine-human relation. In Reluctant Theologians, she shows that Kafka, Celan, and Jabs offer as a testament, as three unique instances of Kiddush Ha-Shem (sanctification of the divine name), to a divine source that persists at the same time as it is being continuously reconstituted in the moment of writing. What connects Kafka, Celan, and Jabs to a postmodern philosophy is their shared belief that a specifically Jewish ethic can serve as a model for a universal ethic.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Beth Hawkins focuses on the problematic faith in the works of Kafka, Celan, and Jabs to reevaluate the notions of God and covenant in light of Nietzsche's death of Godhypothesis. the divine-human relation. In Reluctant Theologians, she shows that Kafka, Celan, and Jabs offer as a testament, as three unique instances of Kiddush Ha-Shem (sanctification of the divine name), to a divine source that persists at the same time as it is being continuously reconstituted in the moment of writing. What connects Kafka, Celan, and Jabs to a postmodern philosophy is their shared belief that a specifically Jewish ethic can serve as a model for a universal ethic.
Autorenporträt
Beth Hawkins