Bóstwo bezmocne i dusze błądzące: Boski paradygmat dybuka w rosyjskim oryginale „Pomiędzy dwoma światami” Szymona An-skiego = The Powerless Godhead and Wandering Souls : The Dybbuk’s Divine Paradigm in the Russian Original of Between Two Worlds by S. An-sky

In this paper I demonstrate the concept of the Jewish godhead as presented in the drama Between Two Worlds: The Dybbuk by S. An-sky (Shloyme Zanvl Rappoport), and analyses the phenomenon of a dybbuk, which was very popular in the culture of Hasidim. It should be mentioned that the research subject b...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Studia religiologica
Subtitles:The Powerless Godhead and Wandering Souls
Main Author: Kornacka-Sareło, Katarzyna (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Wydawn. Uniw. Jagiellońskiego 2016
In: Studia religiologica
Further subjects:B Sz. An-ski
B „Pomiędzy dwoma światami. Dybuk”
B Filozofia religii
B Etnografia żydowska
B Teatr żydowski
B Bóstwo kabalistyczne
B Chasydyzm
B Heterodoksja w judaizmie
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Summary:In this paper I demonstrate the concept of the Jewish godhead as presented in the drama Between Two Worlds: The Dybbuk by S. An-sky (Shloyme Zanvl Rappoport), and analyses the phenomenon of a dybbuk, which was very popular in the culture of Hasidim. It should be mentioned that the research subject became the Russian original of the text of An-sky’s drama. The text was found in St Petersburg in 2001. The original differs significantly from its Yiddish and Hebrew versions: the Russian version ofThe Dybbuk is preceded by a long “Prologue”, where the play’s author suggests its most important ideas to the viewers. Thus, the reinterpretation of An-sky’s drama, seen from a philosophical perspective, enables one to justify the thesis that theauthor was conscious of some incoherency intrinsically present in the realm of the religious beliefs of Hasidic communities, where both the God of Biblical and Talmudic narratives, and the impersonal godhead of Kabbalah were, simultaneously, worshipped. What is more: the author also focuses on the weakness of the godhead, as he or she has been deprived of his or her primordial, male-female, unity. At the same time, while analysing An-sky’s text, I draw attention to the fact that in this play a dybbuk, an evil spirit existing in a living person’s body, is portrayed as a much better entity: An-sky’s dybbuk is a soul of a man who died prematurely, and who is wandering and missing his earthly lover, similarly to Shekhinah, who is missing her lover in heaven, and is wandering in exile, together with the Jewish nation.
ISSN:2084-4077
Contains:Enthalten in: Studia religiologica
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.4467/20844077SR.16.012.5233