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On The Edge of Abyss: Jewish Unconscious before Freud

On The Edge of Abyss: Jewish Unconscious before Freud in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $115.00
Get it at Barnes and Noble
On The Edge of Abyss: Jewish Unconscious before Freud

On The Edge of Abyss: Jewish Unconscious before Freud in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $115.00
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Size: Hardcover

Get it at Barnes and Noble
A history of the unconscious in public discourse before Freud and its significance for Jewish emancipation.
When Sigmund Freud published his theory of the unconscious, in 1899, he popularized an idea that had fascinated generations of Jewish philosophers before him. In this book, Clémence Boulouque charts the development of the pre—Freudian unconscious from subcultural inquiry to dominant discourse during the long nineteenth century. Although Freud’s scientific notion differed from Schelling’s mythical description of the abyss from which creation springs, its resonance with older ideas was celebrated as an opportunity to express specifically Jewish contributions to modernity. Indeed, Boulouque shows that the pre—Freudian unconscious emerged from conversations in Jewish mysticism about otherness and coexistence. In the hopeful years before World War I, Boulouque argues, such reflections offered the possibility of emancipation not only to Jews but to all.
A history of the unconscious in public discourse before Freud and its significance for Jewish emancipation.
When Sigmund Freud published his theory of the unconscious, in 1899, he popularized an idea that had fascinated generations of Jewish philosophers before him. In this book, Clémence Boulouque charts the development of the pre—Freudian unconscious from subcultural inquiry to dominant discourse during the long nineteenth century. Although Freud’s scientific notion differed from Schelling’s mythical description of the abyss from which creation springs, its resonance with older ideas was celebrated as an opportunity to express specifically Jewish contributions to modernity. Indeed, Boulouque shows that the pre—Freudian unconscious emerged from conversations in Jewish mysticism about otherness and coexistence. In the hopeful years before World War I, Boulouque argues, such reflections offered the possibility of emancipation not only to Jews but to all.

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