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ویرایش: نویسندگان: Mark Sedgwick, Francesco Piraino سری: Palgrave Studies in New Religions and Alternative Spiritualities, 14 ISBN (شابک) : 9783030617882 ناشر: Springer International Publishing سال نشر: 2021 تعداد صفحات: 0 زبان: English فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 2 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Esoteric transfers and constructions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب نقل و انتقالات و ساختهای باطنی: یهودیت، مسیحیت و اسلام نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
شباهت جریان های باطنی و عرفانی در روایات مختلف دینی از دیرباز مورد توجه محققان بوده است. این کتاب نگاهی نو به رابطه این گونه جریان ها دارد. این بحثی را پیش می برد که با جستجوی جوهرهای مذهبی، کهن الگوها و کلیات، از ویلیام جیمز تا ارانوس آغاز شد. مقوله های جهانی که از آن جست و جو حاصل شد، بعداً به عنوان ساخت های ذات گرایانه مورد انتقاد قرار گرفتند و توسط ساختارشکنی ها مورد سؤال قرار گرفتند. یک توضیح جایگزین توسط اشاعه گران ارائه شد: اینکه بین سنت های مختلف نقل و انتقالاتی وجود دارد. این کتاب مطالعات موردی تجربی از این گونه ساختها و نقل و انتقالات بین یهودیت، مسیحیت و اسلام در دوره پیشامدرن، و یهودیت، مسیحیت، و باطنی گرایی غربی در دوره مدرن را ارائه میکند. این نشان می دهد که واقعاً نقل و انتقالاتی وجود داشته است که می توان به وضوح مستند کرد، و همچنین واقعاً ساخت و سازهایی وجود داشت که اغلب بسیار تخیلی بودند. همچنین نشان می دهد که موارد زیادی وجود داشته که نه انتقال بوده و نه ساخت و ساز، بلکه آمیخته ای از این دو بوده است.
Similarities between esoteric and mystical currents in different religious traditions have long interested scholars. This book takes a new look at the relationship between such currents. It advances a discussion that started with the search for religious essences, archetypes, and universals, from William James to Eranos. The universal categories that resulted from that search were later criticized as essentialist constructions, and questioned by deconstructionists. An alternative explanation was advanced by diffusionists: that there were transfers between different traditions. This book presents empirical case studies of such constructions, and of transfers between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in the premodern period, and Judaism, Christianity, and Western esotericism in the modern period. It shows that there were indeed transfers that can be clearly documented, and that there were also indeed constructions, often very imaginative. It also shows that there were many cases that were neither transfers nor constructions, but a mixture of the two.
Note on Transliteration Acknowledgments Contents Notes on Contributors List of Figures Chapter 1: Introduction: The Esoteric and the Mystical, Transfers and Constructions The Dreams of Poliphilo Abraham and the Mediterranean The Esoteric and the Mystical Two Transfers and a Construction Conclusion Part I: Premodern Transfers Chapter 2: Seekers of Love: The Phenomenology of Emotion in Jewish, Christian, and Sufi Mystical Sources Embodied Love in Kabbalah Love as Dissolution in the Christian Humanist Discourse of Marsilio Ficino Love as Speech in Christian Mystical Discourse Love as Dissolution, Destruction, and Annihilation in Sufi Texts Conclusion Chapter 3: Rabbi Salim Shabazi and Sufism: Synthesis or Juxtaposition? Arabic and Islam in Salim Shabazi’s Poetic Corpus Sufism and Sufi Poets in Lower Yemen What Is Sufi in Sufi Poetry? Shared Ghazal Motifs Shabazi Within the Lower Yemeni Sufi Milieu Conclusion Chapter 4: “And You Should Also Adjure in Arabic:” Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Formulas in the Solomonic Corpus Hebrew, Arabic, and Aramaic in Liber Bileth Rabbi Yohanan Alemanno and Liber Bileth Chapter 5: Compelling the Other: Esoteric Exorcism as a Reflection of Jewish–Christian Social Tensions in Premodern German Demonic Ritual Magic Jewish Ritual Magic8 Christian Ritual Magic Christian Demonic Ritual Magic30 Exorcism and Supersession Being Christian: Supersession and Magical Authority Sacraments, the Covenant, and Demonic Magic Power of the Names Conclusion Part II: Modern Transfers Chapter 6: Tlemcen, Algeria: A Would-Be Esoteric Colonial Settlement of the Fin de Siècle Tlemcen Under French Colonial Rule: The Religious, Spiritual, and Esoteric Landscape Sufism as Seen by French Orientalism in Algeria Doutté and French Orientalism: a French Colonial Reappraisal of Tlemcenian Popular Islam The Occultist Max Théon and his Qualified Perception of the Arab People and Religiosity The Tlemcen Masonic Lodge as a Local and Algerian Political Player The Local Jewish Community Facing its Kabbalistic Legacy Legends of Moses in Tlemcen: The Reason Behind Théon’s Presence? A Civilizing Mission Applied to the Local Jewry The French Kardecian School of Spiritism in Algeria Kardecian Spiritism Facing the ‘Isawiyya Théon’s Grievance Toward Spiritism Conclusion Chapter 7: Alfarabi as Leo Strauss’s Teacher of Platonic Esoteric Writing: Leo Strauss’s Rediscovery of Esotericism and its Islamic Origin The Discovery of Philosophical Esotericism A Forgotten Writing of Strauss: “Farabi’s Plato” Conclusion Chapter 8: Aleister Crowley and Islam The Direct Experience of Islam Thelema and Islam The Cultural Aspects and Burton’s Model The Role of Sufism Conclusion Chapter 9: The Sufi Shaykh and His Patients: Merging Islam, Psychoanalysis, and Western Esotericism Gabriele Mandel’s Biography An Imagined Sufism A Lived Sufism: The Process of Islamization Psychoanalysis: Between the Body and the Soul A Diffused Knowledge and an Immanent Universalism A Fragmented Sufi Order Conclusions Chapter 10: Sufism and the Enneagram The Enneagram The Main Line of the Development and Spread of the Enneagram Ouspensky Collin Silo Óscar Ichazo Claudio Naranjo The Main Line The Attribution of Sufi Origins to the Enneagram The Enneagram as Sufi Practice Laleh Bakhtiar Amanoullah de Vos Hamidah Torres Abdul Karim Baudino Conclusions Part III: Constructions Chapter 11: “A Remarkable Resemblance:” Comparative Mysticism and the Study of Sufism and Kabbalah Sufism and Kabbalah: Shared Sources and Historical Encounters The Academic Study of Sufism and Kabbalah The Public Reception of Studies on Kabbalah and Sufism Genealogies of Mysticism The Mystical Dimension of Islam Jewish Mysticism Conclusion Chapter 12: Heretical Orthodoxy: Eastern and Western Esotericism in Thomas Moore Johnson’s “Platonism” The Sage of the Osage A Midwestern Platonist A Collector of Esoteric Books An Editor of Esoterica An Occultist: Tarot, Yoga, Sex, Magic An Orthodox Heretic Chapter 13: Astrology, Letters, and the Cosmos: Ferid Vokopola’s Syncretism Ferid Vokopola Njeriu “On the Practice of Mysteries” Traditionalist/Occultist Backgrounds Islamic Legacy Political Claims Conclusions Bibliography 1. Introduction: The Esoteric and the Mystical, Transfers and Constructions—Mark Sedgwick and Francesco Piraino Primary Source Secondary Sources 2. Seekers of Love: The Phenomenology of Emotion in Jewish, Christian, and Sufi Mystical Sources—Andrea Gondos Primary Sources Secondary Sources 3. Rabbi Salim Shabazi and Sufism: Synthesis or Juxtaposition?—Mark Wagner Primary Sources Secondary Sources 4. “And You Should Also Adjure in Arabic:” Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Formulas in the Solomonic Corpus—Gal Sofer 5. Compelling the Other: Esoteric Exorcism as a Reflection of Jewish–Christian Social Tensions in Premodern German Demonic Ritual Magic—Ildikó Glaser-Hille Primary Sources Secondary Sources 6. Tlemcen, Algeria: A Would-Be Esoteric Colonial Settlement of the Fin de Siècle—Alexandre Toumarkine Primary Sources Secondary Sources 7. Alfarabi as Leo Strauss’s Teacher of Platonic Esoteric Writing: Leo Strauss’s Rediscovery of Esotericism and its Islamic Origin—Rasoul Namazi 8. Aleister Crowley and Islam—Marco Pasi Primary Sources Secondary Sources 9. The Sufi Shaykh and His Patients: Merging Islam, Psychoanalysis, and Western Esotericism—Francesco Piraino Primary Sources Secondary Sources 10. Sufism and the Enneagram—Mark Sedgwick Primary Sources Secondary Sources 11. “A Remarkable Resemblance:” Comparative Mysticism and the Study of Sufism and Kabbalah—Boaz Huss 12. Heretical Orthodoxy: Eastern and Western Esotericism in Thomas Moore Johnson’s “Platonism”—Vadim Putzu Primary Sources Secondary Sources 13. Astrology, Letters, and the Cosmos: Ferid Vokopola’s Syncretism—Gianfranco Bria Primary Sources Secondary Sources Index