Amir Engel is a lecturer in the German Department at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Engel ultimately portrays the Scholem beloved by Prochnik, Ozick, Bloom, and others as a romanticized image separate from the demystified figure of 'Scholem'. --The Hedgehog Review This careful, convincing intellectual biography of philosopher/historian Gershom Scholem (1897-1982) occasions rethinking the relationship between Scholem's scholarship on kabbalah and sabbatism and his personal journey as a Zionist. Scholem grew up in Germany and in the early 1920s emigrated to what was to become the State of Israel. Engel argues that Scholem's 'unusually wide' and continuing prominence, unexpected for a scholar of an esoteric area of history, results from the profundity of his reflections on central questions of Jewish and European life in the 20th century. Engel critiques previous biographical treatments of Scholem that found in his work an assertion that kabbalah expressed a single metaphysical truth underlying all facets of Jewish history and philosophy. Engel contends that Scholem was more creative than that--that he wove into narratives 'the old and the new, the esoteric and the political, the personal and the social' and in so doing broadened the discussion. Thus, Scholem's scholarship reflects his own life experience even as it reveals a community's need to transform in the face of historical trauma. This engaging, important biography teaches one a great deal about 20th-century European and Jewish history. Highly recommended. --Choice Engel has written a fascinating study of this nearly incomparable modern Jewish thinker. He has excavated the implicit, making explicit the lines of connection between Scholem's life and his work.... As Scholem transcends the boundary between a scholar of Jewish history and a subject of Jewish history scholarship, Engel's biography merits a place in the debate over the man and his thought. --H-Net Reviews Amir Engel claims to have 'demystified' his subject by seamlessly connecting, if not reducing, Scholem's scholarship to his personal, political, and historical context; Engel regards this as his 'most substantial finding.' --Jewish Review of Books Engel portrays Scholem as a mythmaker and stresses the exuberance of his narrative invention in giving renewed voice to a dialogue between the exoteric and the esoteric. --Benjamin Balint Jewish Quarterly Amir Engel, lecturer in the German Department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, has published a well-researched and inspiring study on Gershom Scholem: a key ?gure in Jewish cultural history of the twentieth century, who is regarded as the founder of a new academic discipline, that of Jewish mysticism. --Gabriele Guerra Political Theology In this probing and well-researched biography Engel presents Scholem as similarly one who early on was inspired by Zionism to overcome what he viewed as a two thousand year period of stagnation for 'Jews in exile', who emigrated to Palestine in 1923 when his vision was not accepted in Germany, but was similarly disappointed by what he found there. --Patrick Madigan Heythrop Journal Character traits matter, in part because they circulate through a community. Reviews of books by intellectuals rarely mention them. Perhaps they should even lead with them. But how much weight should they be given?... I would like to suggest, with some fear and trembling, that Scholem's ideas can show a way out of this impasse. Amir Engel's book, the best of this lot in my view, presents Scholem's thought as beginning with a youthful enthusiasm and settling into a mature caution. --Martin Kavka Tikkun