Dr. Eitan Fishbane awarded the NEH Summer Stipend Award
Dr. Eitan Fishbane, Assistant Professor of Jewish Thought
at HUC-JIR/Los Angeles, has been awarded the NEH Summer Stipend Award, which
will support work on his current book project, tentatively titled "Techniques
of Mystical Practice: Isaac of Acre and Kabbalistic Contemplation in the 14th
Century."
Dr. Fishbane received his Ph.D. from the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic
Studies at Brandeis University (2003), and specializes in the study of medieval
Jewish mysticism. Joining the HUC-JIR faculty this academic year, Dr. Fishbane
teaches a range of core and elective courses in Jewish religious thought from
the Middle Ages through the modern period, with topics including historical
theology, philosophy, exegesis, Kabbalah, and Hasidism. His specific areas of
research include intention and contemplation in kabbalistic prayer; the transmission
of kabbalistic traditions and the rhetoric of authority; techniques of autobiography
and confession in Jewish mystical texts; the literary style and poetics of the
Zohar.
Dr. Fishbane received his Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 2003 and is currently
working on a book that studies the range of mystical techniques and traditions
in the writings of Isaac of Acre, a prominent fourteenth century kabbalist.
Selected essays include "Tears of Disclosure: The Role of Weeping in Zoharic
Narrative." The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 11:1 (2002): 25-47,
"Mystical Contemplation and the Limits of the Mind: The Case of Sheqel
ha-Qodesh." The Jewish Quarterly Review 93:1-2 (2002): 1-27; and "Authority,
Tradition, and the Creation of Meaning in Medieval Kabbalah: Isaac of Acre's
Illumination of the Eyes." Forthcoming in the Journal of the American Academy
of Religion (June, 2004).