This is the first full-length biography of Judah Leib Gordon (1830-92), the most important Hebrew poet of the 19th century, and one of the pivotal intellectual and cultural figures in Russian Jewry. Setting Gordon's life and work amidst the political, cultural, and religious upheavals of his society, Stanislawski attempts to counter traditional stereotypical readings of Eastern European Jewish history. As a prominent and passionate exponent of the Jewish Enlightenment in Russia, Gordon advocated a humanist and liberal approach to all the major questions facing Jews in their tortuous transition to modernity--the religious reform of Judaism, the attractions and limits of political liberalism, the relations between Jews and Gentiles, the nature of modern anti-Semitism, the status of women in Jewish life, the possibility of a secular Jewish culture, the nature of Zionism, and the relations between Jews in the Diaspora and the Jewish community in the Land of Israel. His personal story is a fascinating drama that both symbolizes and summarizes the cultural and political challenges facing Russian Jewry at a crucial time in its history, challenges that remain pertinent and controversial today.
Professor Stanislawski's gracefully written biography of the leading spokesman of Jewish Enlightenment in nineteenth-century Russia puts the history of Eastern European Jewry into new perspective. Stanislawski shows the interplay between Russian intellectual and political developments and the emergence of modern Jewish cultural and national consciousness. This thoroughly documented book is essential reading for all those interested in the cultural history of the West in the twentieth century and in the role played by the Jews in it. --Marc Raeff, Columbia University
A historical account of his life and works, free of anachronism, has long been owed to him and it has been splendidly accomplished by Professor Michael Stanislawski. --
Jewish Journal of Sociology