For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia

abstract: One of the great hallmarks of Russian life during the nineteenth century was the proliferation of alternative identities at nearly every level of society. Individuals found, created, or adopted new ways of self-identifying oneself vis-à-vis religion, nationality, and politics. This project...

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Other Authors: Reed, Andrew Christopher (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25008
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-250082018-06-22T03:05:04Z For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia abstract: One of the great hallmarks of Russian life during the nineteenth century was the proliferation of alternative identities at nearly every level of society. Individuals found, created, or adopted new ways of self-identifying oneself vis-à-vis religion, nationality, and politics. This project examines the life of Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son (1819-1911) and his understanding of his identity--from poor Lithuanian Jew to German educated scholar, to leading defendant of Jews accused of ritual murder, to renowned university professor. Khvol'son is often mentioned in works of the period but remains understudied and, as a result, poorly understood. This dissertation is the first to examine the man's life and times, his scholarly and public writings, as well as available commentaries about him from former students, opponents, and colleagues. This project is based on the available archival sources housed in the central archives of Russia and draws upon the different literary venues in which Khvol'son published during his lifetime. While it provides a broad biography of the man, more importantly, it takes on the content of his writing, the themes he explored, and the ways in which his contributions were viewed within their own time. This project argues that the aim of Russian imperial policy toward Jews was based on a hopeful, if hesitant, desire to gradually bring Jews into the state's service. Khvol'son was among the most successful of those candidates who received a world-class German education, a position within the state, and an opportunity to participate fully within Russian intellectual circles. However, Khvol'son's legacy is complex because he promoted a radical rethinking of Christian understanding of Jews and Judaism and by doing so, he challenged the Orthodox world to reconsider in a deeply personal way the ongoing persecutions of Jews based on false tales about them and their religion. Khvol'son painstakingly challenged the blood libel and sought to prove that it was not based in any identifiable reality but perpetuated an un-Christian worldview that demonized and vilified Jews. In doing so, Khvol'son formulated a controversial self-understanding for his position in society as situated between two diametrically opposed worlds--one Christian, the other Jewish. Dissertation/Thesis Reed, Andrew Christopher (Author) Batalden, Stephen K. (Advisor) Tirosh-Samuelson, Hava (Committee member) Von Hagen, Mark (Committee member) Clay, Eugene (Committee member) Horowitz, Brian (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) History Judaic studies Russian history Blood Libel Haskalah Jewish Conversion/Apostasy Khvol'son New Testament Russian Empire eng 384 pages Ph.D. History 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25008 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic History
Judaic studies
Russian history
Blood Libel
Haskalah
Jewish Conversion/Apostasy
Khvol'son
New Testament
Russian Empire
spellingShingle History
Judaic studies
Russian history
Blood Libel
Haskalah
Jewish Conversion/Apostasy
Khvol'son
New Testament
Russian Empire
For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
description abstract: One of the great hallmarks of Russian life during the nineteenth century was the proliferation of alternative identities at nearly every level of society. Individuals found, created, or adopted new ways of self-identifying oneself vis-à-vis religion, nationality, and politics. This project examines the life of Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son (1819-1911) and his understanding of his identity--from poor Lithuanian Jew to German educated scholar, to leading defendant of Jews accused of ritual murder, to renowned university professor. Khvol'son is often mentioned in works of the period but remains understudied and, as a result, poorly understood. This dissertation is the first to examine the man's life and times, his scholarly and public writings, as well as available commentaries about him from former students, opponents, and colleagues. This project is based on the available archival sources housed in the central archives of Russia and draws upon the different literary venues in which Khvol'son published during his lifetime. While it provides a broad biography of the man, more importantly, it takes on the content of his writing, the themes he explored, and the ways in which his contributions were viewed within their own time. This project argues that the aim of Russian imperial policy toward Jews was based on a hopeful, if hesitant, desire to gradually bring Jews into the state's service. Khvol'son was among the most successful of those candidates who received a world-class German education, a position within the state, and an opportunity to participate fully within Russian intellectual circles. However, Khvol'son's legacy is complex because he promoted a radical rethinking of Christian understanding of Jews and Judaism and by doing so, he challenged the Orthodox world to reconsider in a deeply personal way the ongoing persecutions of Jews based on false tales about them and their religion. Khvol'son painstakingly challenged the blood libel and sought to prove that it was not based in any identifiable reality but perpetuated an un-Christian worldview that demonized and vilified Jews. In doing so, Khvol'son formulated a controversial self-understanding for his position in society as situated between two diametrically opposed worlds--one Christian, the other Jewish. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. History 2014
author2 Reed, Andrew Christopher (Author)
author_facet Reed, Andrew Christopher (Author)
title For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
title_short For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
title_full For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
title_fullStr For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
title_full_unstemmed For One's Brothers: Daniil Avraamovich Khvol'son and the "Jewish Question" in Russia
title_sort for one's brothers: daniil avraamovich khvol'son and the "jewish question" in russia
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25008
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