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OF JEWS AND HUMANISM IN FRANCE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2012

ETHAN KLEINBERG*
Affiliation:
History and Letters, Wesleyan University E-mail: ekleinberg@wesleyan.edu

Abstract

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Type
Review Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

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References

1 Mirandola, Giovanni Pico Della, On the Dignity of Man (Indianapolis, 1998), 45Google Scholar.

2 Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, Introduction to Philosophy of History, trans. Rauch, L. (Indianapolis, 1988), 57Google Scholar, original emphasis.

3 Nietzsche, Friedrich, The Gay Science, trans. Kaufmann, W. (New York, 1974), 181Google Scholar.

4 Kojève, Alexandre, Introduction to the Reading of Hegel: Lectures on the Phenomenology of Spirit, ed. Queneau, Raymond, trans. Nichols, James H. (Ithaca, 1980), 20Google Scholar.

5 Blanchot, Maurice, La part du feu (Paris, 1949), 312Google Scholar.

6 Ibid., 313.

7 Derrida, Jacques, “This Strange Institution Called Literature,” in idem, Acts of Literature, ed. Attridge, Derek (New York, 1992), 46Google Scholar, original emphasis.

8 Baring, Edward, “Humanist Pretensions: Catholics, Communists, and Sartre's Struggle for Existentialism in Postwar France,” Modern Intellectual History 7/3 (Oct. 2010), 581609CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 See Levinas, Emmanuel, Sur Maurice Blanchot (Paris, 1975), 10Google Scholar; and idem, Humanisme de l'autre homme (Paris, 1994).

10 Funkenstein, Amos, “History, Counterhistory and Narrative,” in Perceptions of Jewish History (Berkeley, 1993), 36Google Scholar.