J.L. Talmon, Gershom Scholem and the price of Messianism

History of European Ideas 34 (2):169-188 (2008)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Gershom Scholem wrote his famous article, “Redemption through sin”, in 1937, and J.L. Talmon gained the inspiration for his first book, The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy, in the years 1937–1938 at the time when the Moscow trials revealed to the world the bitter reality of what was happening in the Soviet Union. Scholem and Talmon were contemporaries and witnesses of the transformation of communism in the Soviet Union from a vision of egalitarian and universal redemption into a bureaucratic and nationalistic despotism. The major scholar of the history of religious Messianism and the major scholar of the history of secular Messianism both widened the scope of their investigations—the first extending them into the history of Sabbataianism and the second into the French Revolution—and both reached a similar conclusion: both recognized, as Scholem put it, “the profound truth relating to the dialectics of history … of the historical process whereby the fulfilment of one political process leads to the manifestation of its opposite. In the realization of one thing its opposite is revealed”. The two great Israeli historians of ideas plumbed the depths of one of the most fascinating and at the same time tragic manifestations of la condition humaine: the human challenge of bringing the heavenly city down to the vale of tears, and the price that men have to pay for their Messianic passion.

Other Versions

No versions found

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 99,484

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Arendt, Scholem, Benjamin.Raluca Eddon - 2006 - European Journal of Political Theory 5 (3):261-279.
Erich Fromm och Gersholm Scholem: analys av en ovänskap.Svante Lundgren - 1998 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 19 (1-2):33-44.
‘+1’: Scholem and the Paradoxes of the Infinite.Julia Ng - 2014 - Rivista Italiana di Filosofia del Linguaggio 8 (2):196-210.
From Eros to Eschaton: Herbert Marcuse's Liberation of Time.Caroline Edwards - 2013 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2013 (165):91-114.

Analytics

Added to PP
2013-12-28

Downloads
44 (#409,340)

6 months
8 (#429,418)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

Gershom Scholem.Shaul Magid - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Add more citations

References found in this work

Gnosticism and modern nihilism.Hans Jonas - forthcoming - Social Research: An International Quarterly.
The Messianic Idea in Judaism.Gershom Scholem - 1973 - Religious Studies 9 (3):369-370.

Add more references