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E-raamat: Hagiography in the Age of Mass Publishing: Hasidic Writing and the Making of Jewish Modernity

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"Taking an innovative approach to the study of religious literature and literary modernity, this book examines an overlooked body of texts - collections of Hasidic hagiographic stories about pious leaders, which were mass-produced during the nineteenth century - and makes a compelling argument for reading these works as a crucial part of modern Jewish literature. Despite criticism from members of the Jewish Enlightenment, who dismissed the leisure reading of these Hasidic booklets as lowbrow, the texts found a thriving audience in Eastern European Jewish society. In a nuanced study, Chen Mandel-Edrei challenges the conventional view of Hasidic literature as inherently anti-modern, and demonstrates how these popular stories presented a unique alternative path for Jewish modernity.Placing Hasidic storytelling and publishing in sociopolitical context, Mandel-Edrei centers the reading and writing practices of the ordinary people who drove the success of the hagiographic genre, particularly in Galicia following the 1848 revolutions. She analyzes how Hasidic writers actively engaged with modern political, philosophical, and aesthetic ideas, adapting them to their traditional way of life and reimagining concepts like individuality and communal identity. Deftly combining literary analysis and cultural history, this book illuminates the interplay between religion, mysticism, and the emergence of mass print culture, shedding new light on the history of Hasidism, Jewish literature, and modernity itself"-- Provided by publisher.

Taking an innovative approach to the study of religious literature and literary modernity, this book examines an overlooked body of texts – collections of Hasidic hagiographic stories about pious leaders, which were mass-produced during the nineteenth century – and makes a compelling argument for reading these works as a crucial part of modern Jewish literature. Despite criticism from members of the Jewish Enlightenment, who dismissed the leisure reading of these Hasidic booklets as lowbrow, the texts found a thriving audience in Eastern European Jewish society. In a nuanced study, Chen Mandel-Edrei challenges the conventional view of Hasidic literature as inherently anti-modern, and demonstrates how these popular stories presented a unique alternative path for Jewish modernity.Placing Hasidic storytelling and publishing in sociopolitical context, Mandel-Edrei centers the reading and writing practices of the ordinary people who drove the success of the hagiographic genre, particularly in Galicia following the 1848 revolutions. She analyzes how Hasidic writers actively engaged with modern political, philosophical, and aesthetic ideas, adapting them to their traditional way of life and reimagining concepts like individuality and communal identity. Deftly combining literary analysis and cultural history, this book illuminates the interplay between religion, mysticism, and the emergence of mass print culture, shedding new light on the history of Hasidism, Jewish literature, and modernity itself.

Arvustused

"Chen Mandel-Edrei offers illuminating analyses of the Hasidic 'holy tale' in relation to Jewish modernity, focusing on the impact of folklore as 'lived religion,' print culture, mass media, and marketing. This book is a welcome, and necessary, addition to the growing literature on Hasidism, modernity, and mass media."Shaul Magid, Harvard University

"Chen Mandel-Edrei has written a work of primary importance, revising existing maps of the origins of modern Jewish literature by centering Hasidic hagiographical storytelling. These chapbooks, generally neglected by existing scholarship, can now be recognized as works deeply engaged with the persistent concerns of Jewish modernity."Naomi Seidman, University of Toronto

Acknowledgments
1. Rethinking Hasidic Hagiography: Introduction
2. The History and Politics of Hasidic Authorship
3. The Modern Individual and the Hasidic Praxis of Storytelling
4. Rethinking Women in Hasidic Literature: Female Agency in a Spiritual
World
5. The Hasidic Chronotope: Folkloric Adventures in Mysterious Realism
Epilogue: Beyond Hasidism: Jewish Popular Literature and Historiography at
the Margins
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Chen Mandel-Edrei is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Mandel Scholion Research Center, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.