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Call for Publications

Theme: Philosophy of Dialogue in Russian, German, and Jewish Thought
Publication: Judaica Petropolitana
Date: Special Issue (2020)
Deadline: 31.10.2020

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As we had to cancel our Conference "Philosophy of Dialogue in
Russian, German, and Jewish Thought" which was planned for June due
to the COVID-19 pandemy, we decided to keep and to continue the
project in the special issue of the Judaica Petropolitana.

Judaica Petropolitana invites submissions for the 2020 special issue
on "Philosophy of Dialogue in Russian, German, and Jewish Thought".
Judaica Petropolitana is edited by the Department of Jewish Culture,
Saint-Petersburg State University in collaboration with the
International Center for University Teaching of Jewish Civilization
at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

The aim of the the special issue is to examine an essential issue of
Jewish thought, meaningful throughout the entire history of Jewish
philosophy - dialogism and dialogical approach. The topic of the
issue provides an overview of the broadest spectrum of Jewish
philosophical teachings, both in chronological and spatial terms, in
internal and external connections. 

In the special issue  we intend to address the dialogical philosophy
(philosophy of dialogue) as a point of collaboration and interaction
betweeen the Russian, German, German-Jewish, and Jewish intellectual
traditions. Dialogism is deeply rooted in the Russian culture as
attested by Dostoevskiy and Bakhtin. Dialogical thought in Germany
includes extremely rich heritage of works and ideas of Ludwig
Feuerbach, Hermann Cohen, Franz Rosenzweig, Ferdinand Ebner, Martin
Buber, Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy. In the Jewish thought the Bible and
Talmud affirm the Dialogism and dialogical approach to core
theological and philosophical issues. Jewish philosophy and mysticism
continue the approach. Accordingly, studies on Dialogism allows to
treat inter-cultural and inter-philosophical dialogues, exchanges,
conflicts and interactions.

The issue will address the following topics:

1. Dialogism in the Jewish thought of Biblical and Post-Biblical era.
Dialogism of the Talmud and Midrash. Dialogism of the Medieval Jewish
philosophy and mystical thought.

2. Sources and evolution of the philosophy of dialogue in Germany:
Jacobi, Kant, Feuerbach, and Cohen.

3. Philosophy of dialogue in Germany and Austria at the turn of the
XXth century: Franz Rosenzweig, Ferdinand Ebner, Martin Buber, Eugen
Rosenstock-Huessy.

4. Dialogism in Russian and the Russian thought: Dostoevskiy,
Vyacheslav Ivanov, Bakhtin, and Vladimir Bibler.

5. Philosophy of dialogue and phenomelogy: Levinas.

6. Philosophy of dialogue and the pedagogical thought. Philosophers
of dialogue on novations in education. Dialogical pedagogy and
theories of learning and education. Rosenzweig, Buber,
Rosenstock-Huessy, Levinas, Vladimir Bibler и др.

7. Recent state-of-the art and perspectives of philosophy of dialogue
(Russia, Israel, etc).

Judaica Petropolitana has been published since 2015. The Judaica
Petropolitana is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed open-access
journal of Jewish Studies, dedicated to the exploration of the core
issues in Jewish Culture, Philosophy, History, and Religion. It aims
to respond both to the traditional disciplinary approaches in Jewish
Studies and emerging new fields of research that goes beyond received
historiographic categories and concepts. It publishes two issues per
year and contains a thematic section, translations and archival
publications, essays and reviews.

The Judaica Petropolitana publishes high-quality research articles,
essays, reviews reporting results of research in Jewish Studies, with
a special interest in cross-disciplinary approaches. It furthermore
aims to bring to the attention of the scholarly community many yet
unexplored topics, primarily grown from complex and multifaceted
history of Jewish life and culture under Russian Empire and Soviet
Union. 

The main languages of the journal are Russian, English, Hebrew,
although contributions are also accepted in French and German.

The deadline for the submissions:
October 31, 2020.

The articles will be published after a double blind peer-review
process. All articles should conform to our submission guidelines
(the APA citation and referencing style, 6th edition; we kindly ask
potential authors to request the detailed instruction via email or
consult with the instruction at our webpage).

All submissions, proposals and editorial inquiries should be
addressed to: Igor Tantlevskiy ([email protected]) and Igor Kaufman
([email protected])


Contact:

Igor Kaufman
Judaica Petropolitana
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://judaica-petropolitana.philosophy.spbu.ru




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