The Migration of Metaphysics into the Realm of the Profane : : Theodor W. Adorno Reads Gershom Scholem / / Ansgar Martins.

Ansgar Martins’s The Migration of Metaphysics into the Realm of the Profane is the first book-length study focusing on Adorno’s idiosyncratic appropriation of Jewish mysticism in the light of his relationship to Gershom Scholem and their shared intellectual contexts. Rather than merely posit vague a...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:IJS Studies in Judaica ; 20
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden; , Boston : : BRILL,, 2020.
Year of Publication:2020
Language:English
Series:IJS Studies in Judaica ; 20.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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Table of Contents:
  • Half Title
  • Series Information
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Preface to the English Edition
  • Acknowledgements
  • Translator's Preface
  • Introduction How to Read Adorno
  • 1 Relevant Secondary Literature
  • 2 On Adorno's Style and Terminology
  • Chapter 1 Adorno, Scholem &amp
  • Co.: An Historical Constellation
  • 1 How Central is the Kabbalah to Benjamin's Philosophy?
  • 2 From the Defence of Metaphysics to the Salvage of a Heretical Theology
  • 3 The Absolute as Process: Kabbalah and Dialectical Idealism in Frankfurt
  • 4 Moving Everything by Just a Smidgen to Its Rightful Place: A Metaphor of Redemption in Adorno, Scholem, Benjamin, Bloch and Buber
  • 5 The Drastic Guilt of Having Been Spared
  • Chapter 2 Adorno's Comments on Scholem's Zohar Translation (1939)
  • 1 Critiquing Symbolic Language: Nonintentionality, Nature, Myth
  • 1.1 Nonintentionality
  • 1.2 Nature
  • 1.3 Immanence as Myth
  • 2 The "Decay" of Occidental Gnosticism or Primordial Religious Experience?
  • 2.1 The Decay of the Neoplatonic-Gnostic Tradition
  • 2.2 Primordial Experience and Reified Consciousness
  • 2.3 Truth's Temporal Nucleus
  • 2.4 The Remarkable Trait of All Sensible Forms of Mysticism
  • Chapter 3 From Sabbatai Zevi to Kafka: The Assay of Migrating into the Profane
  • 1 Antinomian Mysticism: Adorno's Sabbatianism
  • 1.1 Redemption through Sin
  • 1.2 Three Levels of Profanation, or the Art of Making the Lifeboat Capsize
  • 1.3 Anything but an Atheist
  • 1.4 Religious Nihilism and the Radical Transformation of All Human Affairs
  • 2 Kafka: The Emptying of the World to a Meaningless Void
  • 2.1 An Infinite Amount of Hope-Just Not for Us
  • 2.2 Adorno's Inverse Theology
  • 2.3 Parting Ways on the Issue of Revelation
  • 2.4 The Problem of Gnosticism
  • 2.5 Odradek or the Salvage of Useless Things.
  • Chapter 4 Tradition and Experience: Kabbalah and Negative Dialectics
  • 1 Kabbalah Means Tradition: On the Inner Historicity of Knowledge
  • 1.1 Philosophy and Tradition
  • 1.2 Revelation, Tradition, Commentary
  • 1.3 Dialectics of Tradition
  • 1.4 Profane and Sacred Texts in Walter Benjamin
  • 1.5 Dubious Genealogies: The Concept of Recollection (Eingedenken)
  • 2 Does Metaphysical Experience Foreshadow Reconciliation?
  • 2.1 The Joy and Hazard of Embracing Experience
  • 2.2 The Interpretive Immersion in Traditional Texts
  • 2.3 What Dawned on Proust in Illiers
  • 2.4 A Form of What is within Objects That Simultaneously Exists outside of Them
  • 2.5 Sparks of the Messianic End of History
  • 2.6 Waiting in Vain: On the Negativity of Metaphysical Experience
  • Chapter 5 Kabbalah and Aesthetics
  • 1 Mysticism and Aesthetics in Adorno
  • 2 The Language of the Angels: The Paradoxes of Negativism and Hope in Music
  • 2.1 The Purely Symphonic Movement as Divine Lament
  • 2.2 Grass Angels: The Representation of Transience and Reconciliation
  • 2.3 The Formal Law of Shrinkage
  • 2.4 Tied-on Wings
  • 3 Kabbalistic Motifs and Aesthetic Interpretation
  • 3.1 Whether Goethe Intended Them to or Not
  • 3.2 Not Abraham but Abram
  • 3.3 The Rending Asunder of the Veil
  • 3.4 Evil as Scattered Manifestations of Shattered Divine Power
  • 3.5 An Attempt to Name the Name
  • 4 Scholem Responds to Adorno's "Sacred Fragment"
  • 4.1 Has the Creation of Sacred Music Become Impossible?
  • 4.2 A Subterranean Mystical Tradition?
  • Conclusion: Something Is Missing
  • Bibliography
  • Acronyms
  • Cited Writings by Theodor W. Adorno
  • Cited Writings by Gershom Scholem
  • Other Literature
  • References to Adorno's Published Texts
  • References to Scholem's Published Texts
  • General Index.