
Women Write Buber
Engendering Martin Buber's Thought
Brill Deutschland GmbH (Publisher)
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 3. August 2026
Book
Hardback
280 pages
978-3-506-79740-7 (ISBN)
Description
Women Writing Buber
sheds new light on Martin Buber's thought through the voices of women scholars who engaged with, interpreted, and transformed his philosophy. The book uncovers a vibrant and often overlooked intellectual conversation that challenges the traditional, male-dominated reception of Buber's work.
Bringing together thinkers and scholars from diverse intellectual interests,
Women Writing Buber
explores how female perspectives reframe central concepts such as dialogue, encounter, and relationality. By tracing these interpretations across literature, philosophy, theology, art, politics, and environmentalism, the book not only expands the understanding of Buber's legacy but also centers and repositions women's contributions within modern Jewish thought. This book goes beyond the classical division between the work of the thinker and its scholarly reception. In this collection, female scholars imagine and develop the missing parts of Buber's work.
"How do women view the great theologian Martin Buber? Can thinking with gender help us probe more deeply into Buber's understanding of I-Thou relationships, Jewish spirituality, and the nature of community? This remarkable collection, based on a conference, gives us new insights into Buber's writings and demonstrates the illumination that comes when thinking with gender."
Susannah Heschel, Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College
"Approaching Buber with 'a feminist bias', the present volume offers a critical counterpoint to the growing literature on Buber, which often vacillates between adulation and exasperation. While Women Write Buber imposes no unified or conclusive viewpoint, the contributors turn Buber from his head onto his feet, retrieving the feminine/feminist potential from his patriarchal veneer. The essays are uniformly excellent, informative, and groundbreaking."
Michael Zank, Professor of Religion, Boston University
"How do women view the great theologian Martin Buber? Can thinking with gender help us probe more deeply into Buber's understanding of I-Thou relationships, Jewish spirituality, and the nature of community? This remarkable collection, based on a conference, gives us new insights into Buber's writings and demonstrates the illumination that comes when thinking with gender."
Susannah Heschel, Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College
"Approaching Buber with 'a feminist bias', the present volume offers a critical counterpoint to the growing literature on Buber, which often vacillates between adulation and exasperation. While Women Write Buber imposes no unified or conclusive viewpoint, the contributors turn Buber from his head onto his feet, retrieving the feminine/feminist potential from his patriarchal veneer. The essays are uniformly excellent, informative, and groundbreaking."
Michael Zank, Professor of Religion, Boston University
More details
Series
Edition
2026
Language
English
Place of publication
Netherlands
Publishing group
Brill | Schöningh
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
17
17 s/w Abbildungen
17 schwarz-weiße Abbildungen
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
ISBN-13
978-3-506-79740-7 (9783506797407)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Yemima Hadad is a Professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Leipzig's Theological Faculty and a research fellow at the Bucerius Institute at the University of Haifa.
Cedric Cohen-Skalli is a Professor of Jewish History and Bible at Haifa University and the director of the Bucerius Institute for Contemporary German History.
Ronen Pinkas is an interim Professor at the School of Jewish Theology at the University of Potsdam.
Cedric Cohen-Skalli is a Professor of Jewish History and Bible at Haifa University and the director of the Bucerius Institute for Contemporary German History.
Ronen Pinkas is an interim Professor at the School of Jewish Theology at the University of Potsdam.