"Schulte's colorful patchwork history shows that zimzum has been a constant preoccupation far beyond the network of rabbinic scholars who considered themselves direct heirs to the kabbalistic tradition." (Jewish Review of Books) "The shining translation by Corey Twitchell, working closely with the author, allows a vital work to have a new and expanded audience. Bravo! A book for every library—in Jewish studies and well beyond." (Sander L. Gilman, author of Are Racists Crazy? How Prejudice, Racism, and Antisemitism Became Markers of Insanity) "Christoph Schulte's Zimzum: God and the Origin of the World surveys the major interpretations of the notion of divine contraction in Jewish mysticism, in the developments triggered by its reverberations in German philosophy, and in modern scholarship." (Moshe Idel, Hebrew University, Jerusalem) "This brilliant book, tracing the origins and later transformations of the notion of zimzum—from Luria to contemporary arts—is a necessary read for all interested in the intellectual history of Western modernity." (Agata Bielik-Robson, University of Nottingham)