Communities of Dialogue Russian and Ukrainian Émigrés in Modernist Prague

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George Eliot and kabbalism

historical and literary context

Saleel NurbhaiK. M. Newton

pp. 25-34

Abstract

My Gentile nature kicks most resolutely against any assumption of superiority in the Jews, and is almost ready to echo Voltaire’s vituperation. I bow to the supremacy of Hebrew poetry, but much of their early mythology and almost all of their history is utterly revolting. Their stock has produced a Moses and a Jesus, but Moses was impregnated with Egyptian philosophy and Jesus is venerated and adored by us only for that wherein he transcended or resisted Judaism. The very exhaltation of their idea of a national deity into a spiritual monotheism seems to have been borrowed from other oriental tribes. Everything specifically Jewish is of a low grade. (Letters, I, 246–7)1 (Eliot’s emphasis)

Publication details

Published in:

Nurbhai Saleel, Newton K. M. (2002) George Eliot, judaism and the novels: Jewish myth and mysticism. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Pages: 25-34

DOI: 10.1057/9780230288539_2

Full citation:

Nurbhai Saleel, Newton K. M. (2002) George Eliot and kabbalism: historical and literary context, In: George Eliot, judaism and the novels, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 25–34.