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In Abram Leon's 1946 book The Jewish Question, Leon examines Jewish history from a materialist perspective. According to Leon, Marx's essay uses the framing that one "must not start with religion in order to explain Jewish history; on the contrary: the preservation of the Jewish religion or nationality can be explained only by the 'real Jew ...
"The Elusiveness of Tolerance: The" Jewish Question" from Lessing to the Napoleonic Wars." Eighteenth-Century Studies 32.1 (1998): 127-128. Roudinesco, Elisabeth (2013) Returning to the Jewish Question, London, Polity Press, p. 280; Wolf, Lucien (1919) "Notes on the Diplomatic History of the Jewish Question", Jewish Historical Society of England
On the Jewish Question (1844) by Karl Marx in response to Bauer's 1843 book, critical of Jewish separatism, but arguing for voluntary assimilation without a need to become Christians (first) Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (1670) by Baruch Spinoza, critical of all religions; Judaism and Christianity in particular. Critical of Jewish separatism.
The Jewish Question is an 1843 book by German historian and theologian Bruno Bauer, written and published in German (original title Die Judenfrage). [1]Bauer argued that Jews can achieve political emancipation only if they relinquish their particular religious consciousness, since political emancipation requires a secular state, which he assumes does not leave any "space" for social identities ...
The Pillar of Fire, according to the Biblical story, led the Israelites, with its fire during the night and its smoke during daylight, to the place where Moses gave them the Ten Commandments from God. In 2021 the Hebrew book Bambara was translated to English and published by BookBaby under the title "BAMBARA Uncovering The Hidden Footsteps From ...
In 1893, Fritsch published his most famous work, The Handbook of the Jewish Question, which leveled a number of conspiratorial charges at European Jews and called upon Germans to refrain from intermingling with them. Vastly popular, the book was read by millions and was in its 49th edition by 1944 (330,000 copies).
The book goes against some accepted assumptions in Zionist historiography and in the Israeli public. The Zionist movement was founded by Theodor Herzl as a movement for the "Jewish cause," that is, the solution of the Jewish Question in Europe through the mass migration of Jews to a
Jewish existentialism is a category of work by Jewish authors dealing with existentialist themes and concepts (e.g. debate about the existence of God and the meaning of human existence), and intended to answer theological questions that are important in Judaism.