
The Kabbalistic Tree / האילן הקבלי
J. H. Chajes
(Author)Description
Ilanot--parchment sheets presenting the kabbalistic "tree of life"--have been at the center of Jewish mystical practice for the past seven hundred years. Written by leading ilanot expert J. H. Chajes, The Kabbalistic Tree is a comprehensive and gorgeously illustrated history of these arboreal "maps of God."
This book documents when, where, and why Jews began to visualize and to draw the mystical shape of the Divine as a Porphyrian tree. At once maps, mandalas, and memory palaces, ilanot provided kabbalists with diagrammatic representations of their structured image of God. Scrolling an ilan parchment in contemplative study, the kabbalist participated mimetically in tikkun, the development and perfection of Divinity. Chajes reveals the complex lore behind these objects. His survey begins with the classical ilanot of pre-expulsion Spain, Byzantine Crete, Kurdistan, Yemen, and Renaissance Italy. A close examination of the ilanot inspired by the Kabbalah taught by R. Isaac Luria in sixteenth-century Safed follows, and Chajes concludes with explorations of modern ilan amulets and printed ilanot. With attention to the contexts of their creation and how they were used, The Kabbalistic Tree investigates ilanot from collections around the world, including forty from the incomparable Gross Family Collection.
With 250 never-before-seen images reproduced in stunning quality, this chronological and typological survey is a singular combination of exquisite art and foundational scholarship. Specialists in early modern history, religion, art history, and esotericism, as well as those fascinated by Kabbalah and its iconography, will enthusiastically embrace Chajes's iconic work.
Product Details
Publisher | Penn State University Press |
Publish Date | November 29, 2022 |
Pages | 456 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780271093451 |
Dimensions | 10.3 X 8.3 X 1.7 inches | 4.6 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"It is not frequent that one encounters a book which inspires unreservedly and which one is instinctively convinced will endure. It is therefore not possible to simply review such a book. Instead, I feel compelled to laud its merits and endeavor to disseminate this remarkable book to a wider audience. In the manner of a carnival barker, I can only urge those who have become intrigued by this book to purchase it. Or, alternatively, have someone get it for you as a gift. The Kabbalistic Tree by Yossi Chajes is one such book."
--Bill Rebiger Frankfurt Jewish Studies Bulletin
"The Kabbalistic Tree is a landmark accomplishment."
--Vadim Putzu Religion
"Chajes has gifted an in the diverse rivers flowing forth from Eden - from early modern history, religion, art history, and esotericism, as well as those fascinated by Kabbalah and its iconography - with a feast of the eyes sure to expand the heart-mind of both seeker and scholar."
--Aubrey L. Glazer Religious Studies Review
"Chajes's book is bound to become a classic, not just because it is the first and most comprehensive survey of the history and development of kabbalistic trees but also because its attention to detail, both graphic and written, makes it an invaluable tool for further research and discoveries in this often neglected area of Jewish thought."
--Mordechai Beck The Christian Century
"The outcome of a decennial work by Yossi Chajes and his collaborators, this volume indeed constitutes the first collection and systematic study of a forgotten genre - the ilanot, or kabbalistic "trees" - and can therefore legitimately aspire to become a milestone of research in Jewish studies."
--Maurizio Mottolese Jewish Matter
"This beautifully produced work provides an unprecedented study of the pictorial representations of the ten sefirot, divine emanations, as imagined by the Kabbalists over the centuries. . . . This is a thoughtful, learned, and wise study."
--S. T. Katz Choice
"The Kabbalistic Tree is a carefully curated and richly interpreted visual resource."
--Avinoam J. Stillman Jewish Review of Books
"A feast for the eyes and for the mind, The Kabbalistic Tree should be essential reading for all of us eager to imagine a Judaism for the future."
--Micha Odenheimer Haaretz
"A monumental achievement that will be valuable to scholars and general readers interested in Judaism, religion, and art history."
--starred review Library Journal
"A superb accomplishment."
--Richard Smoley Quest
"Late in the Middle Ages--mysteriously, graphically, and in a strikingly abstract, yet concrete fashion--Kabbalistic trees began sprouting from Judaism's alphabet-saturated ground. J. H. Chajes's magnificent study takes us for the first time into the history of their emergence andburgeoning, where visual and verbal vectors align, and the 'double-helix of Kabbalah' is revealed. This is a path-breaking book, years in the making and thrilling to read."
--Peter Cole, author of The Poetry of Kabbalah: Mystical Verse from the Jewish Tradition
"A tour de force! A brilliant analysis of an astonishing object. Dense with texts and drawings, these Kabbalistic scrolls finally receive the scholarly attention they so deserve. In his analysis of these cosmological visualizations, Chajes treats image and text as an inseparable totality. The result is a model for the analysis of 'iconotexts.' A richly illustrated work of great erudition and intellectual imagination and a fascinating read."
--Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Chief Curator of the Core Exhibition at POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews
"Chajes has made these trees of ink on parchment and paper sing out loud and clear, redeeming them from obscurity and thus simultaneously enriching the fields of the history of visual aesthetics and the history of Jewish culture."
--Marc Michael Epstein, author of Skies of Parchment, Seas of Ink: Jewish Illuminated Manuscripts
"Until this volume there has been no work that endeavours to provide scholars and laypeople with a broad overall and particular description of the ilanot in all of their varieties, twists, and turns. This enterprise is fascinating and truly illuminating, and no one to this day has touched even a fraction of what the book has to offer."
--Richard I. Cohen, co-author of Samuel Hirszenberg, 1865-1908: A Polish Jewish Artist in Turmoil
"J. H. Chajes's spectacular book offers a comprehensive and fascinating study of the diagrammatic visualization of Kabbalistic knowledge. Chajes's meticulous study of the arboreal Kabbalistic diagrams is an outstanding contribution to the study of Kabbalah, early modern and modern Jewish history, and Jewish visual culture."
--Boaz Huss, author of Mystifying Kabbalah: Academic Scholarship, National Theology, and New Age Spirituality
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