- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part 1 Benamozegh’s Texts and Contexts: Morocco, the Risorgimento, and the Disputed Manuscript
- Chapter 1 The Moroccan World of a Livornese Jew
- Chapter 2 An Italian Jewish Patriot in the Risorgimento
- Chapter 3 The Banned Author and the Oriental Publisher
- Chapter 4 Expanding His Readership
- Chapter 5 The Afterlives of a Manuscript
- Part II Universalism as an Index of Jewish Modernity
- Chapter 6 Situating Benamozegh in the Debate on Jewish Universalism
- Chapter 7 Normativity and Inclusivity in Modernity
- Chapter 8 Cosmopolitanism and Universalism
- Chapter 9 Universalism in Particularism
- Part III Beyond Binaries: Kabbalah as a Tool for Modernity
- Chapter 10 Kabbalah
- Chapter 11 Beyond Dualism
- Chapter 12 Kabbalah as Politics
- Part IV Past Enmity: Modes of Interreligious Engagement and Jewish Self-Affirmation
- Chapter 13 Religious Enmity and Tolerance Reconsidered
- Chapter 14 “The Iron Crucible” and Loci of Religious Contact
- Chapter 15 Self-Assertion and a Jewish Theology of Religions
- Chapter 16 Modes of Interreligious Engagement
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture
Modes of Interreligious Engagement
Modes of Interreligious Engagement
From Theory to Social Practices
- Chapter:
- (p.183) Chapter 16 Modes of Interreligious Engagement
- Source:
- Another Modernity
- Author(s):
Clémence Boulouque
- Publisher:
- Stanford University Press
Chapter 16 examines the theory and practices of interreligious rapprochement, encounters, and dialogue in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Retracing the stages of such endeavors prior to the Second World War helps refine the categories used to describe these modes of interaction and to consider how they have applied to intellectual efforts and social practices, including the Second Vatican Council in 1965, against the conceptual legacy of Benamozegh. Because Benamozegh’s work aimed to bring about religious unity, and because he found a disciple in Aimé Pallière and a posthumous audience for his calls to promote coexistence, assessing the implementation of this prescriptive and convoluted thought is a necessary conclusion of this study.
Keywords: interreligious, interfaith, Vatican II, Aimé Pallière
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part 1 Benamozegh’s Texts and Contexts: Morocco, the Risorgimento, and the Disputed Manuscript
- Chapter 1 The Moroccan World of a Livornese Jew
- Chapter 2 An Italian Jewish Patriot in the Risorgimento
- Chapter 3 The Banned Author and the Oriental Publisher
- Chapter 4 Expanding His Readership
- Chapter 5 The Afterlives of a Manuscript
- Part II Universalism as an Index of Jewish Modernity
- Chapter 6 Situating Benamozegh in the Debate on Jewish Universalism
- Chapter 7 Normativity and Inclusivity in Modernity
- Chapter 8 Cosmopolitanism and Universalism
- Chapter 9 Universalism in Particularism
- Part III Beyond Binaries: Kabbalah as a Tool for Modernity
- Chapter 10 Kabbalah
- Chapter 11 Beyond Dualism
- Chapter 12 Kabbalah as Politics
- Part IV Past Enmity: Modes of Interreligious Engagement and Jewish Self-Affirmation
- Chapter 13 Religious Enmity and Tolerance Reconsidered
- Chapter 14 “The Iron Crucible” and Loci of Religious Contact
- Chapter 15 Self-Assertion and a Jewish Theology of Religions
- Chapter 16 Modes of Interreligious Engagement
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture