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With an introduction by Moshe Rosman.Ada Rapoport-Albert has been a key player in the profound transformation of the history of hasidism that has taken shape since the 1970s. She has never lacked the courage to question conventional wisdom, but neither has she overturned it lightly. The essays in this volume show the erudition and creativity of her contribution to rewriting the master-narrative of hasidic history. Thanks to her we now know that eighteenth-century hasidism evolved in a context of intense spirituality rather than political, social, economic, or religious crisis. It did not represent the movement’s ‘classic period’ and was not a project of democratization, ameliorating the hierarchical structuring of religion and spirituality. Eighteenth-century hasidism is more accurately described as the formative and creative prelude to the mature movement of the nineteenth century: initially neither institutionalized nor centralized, it developed through a process of differentiation from traditional ascetic-mystical hasidism. Its elite leaders only became conscious of a distinctive group identity after the Ba’al Shem Tov’s death, and they subsequently spent the period from the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth century experimenting with various forms of doctrine, literature, organization, leadership, and transfer of authority. Somewhat surprisingly there was no attempt to introduce any revision of women’s status and role; in the examination of this area of hasidism Rapoport-Albert’s contribution has been singularly revealing. Her work has emphasized that, contrary to hasidism’s thrust towards spiritualization of the physical, the movement persisted in identifying women with an irredeemable materiality: women could never escape their inherent sexuality and attain the spiritual heights. Gender hierarchy therefore persisted and, formally speaking, for the first 150 years or so of hasidism’s existence women were not counted as members of the group. Twentieth-century Habad hasidim responded to modernist feminism by re-evaluating the role of women, but just as Habad appropriated modern rhetorical strategies to defend tradition, so it adopted certain feminist postulates in order to create a counter-feminism that would empower women without destabilizing traditional gender roles. The essays in this volume are a fitting statement of Professor Rapoport-Albert’s importance to the study of hasidism, to Jewish studies as a whole, and to the academic scrutiny of religion. Written over a period of forty years, they have been updated for this volume with regard to significant detail and to take account of important works of scholarship written after they were originally published.
Ada Rapoport-Albert, who died in 2020, was Professor of Jewish Studies and head of the Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at University College London.
Note on Transliteration and Conventions Used in the TextIntroductionMoshe RosmanPART I HISTORY Becoming a Movement1.Hasidism After 1772: Structural Continuity and ChangeConceptualizing Leadership 2.God and the Tsadik as the Two Focal Points of Hasidic Worship3.Confession in the Circle of R. Nahman of BraslavFashioning the Past4Hagiography with Footnotes: Edifying Tales and the Writing of History in HasidismPART II GENDER Women Out?5.From Prophetess to Madwoman: The Displacement of Female Spirituality in the Post-Sabbatian Era6.On Women in Hasidism: S. A. Horodecky and the Maid of Ludmir TraditionWomen In?7.The Emergence of a Female Constituency in Twentieth-Century Habad Hasidism 8.From Woman as Hasid to Woman as ‘Tsadik’ in the Teachings of the Last Two Lubavitcher RebbesBibliographyIndex
'Ada Rapoport-Albert is one of the most striking figures on the field of modern Judaic studies.'Galina Zelenina, Judaic-Slavic Journal
Antony Polonsky, and Chief Historian of the Global Educational Outreach Project at the Museum of Polish Jews in Warsaw) Polonsky, Antony (Emeritus Professor of Holocaust Studies, Brandeis University