2023/06/11

백승종 - 동학의 이름으로 전개한 ‘문화투쟁’

백승종 - 동학의 이름으로 전개한 ‘문화투쟁’ 동학운동은 이중, 삼중적 의미에서 주목할 만한 ‘문화투쟁’이었어요.... | Facebook

동학의 이름으로 전개한 ‘문화투쟁’
동학운동은 이중, 삼중적 의미에서 주목할 만한 ‘문화투쟁’이었어요. 첫째, 서구의 충격으로 존망의 위기에 빠진 동아시아 각국의 자구적인 노력을 상징하는 것이었다는 거지요. 스스로를 구제하기 위한 노력이라는 측면에서 동학은 주목할 가치가 있어요.
둘째, 동학은 또 다른 측면도 가지고 있는데, 차별과 착취라고 하는 내적인 문제의 해결책이었어요. 물론 이것은 조선 사회에 국한된 문제가 아니었지요. 19세기 동아시아 사회 전반에 해당하는 문제이자 서구 사회를 포함하여 전 지구적인 문제였어요. 인류의 역사상에는 항상 사회적 불평등과 차별에서 발생하는 심각한 문제가 있었지요. 지금도 그런 문제가 남아 있고요. 이런 문제를 자력으로 해결하기 위한 동아시아의 해답이 바로 동학운동이었어요. 저는 이를 ‘동아시아의 해답’이라고 말합니다.
설명을 좀 붙여보겠어요. 동학은 동아시아 문화에 공통적인 종교, 철학적 기반 위에서 나타났기 때문입니다. 그런 문화가 한국에만 있었던 것이 아니잖아요. 유교와 불교와 도교는 한국의 문화이기도 했으나, 동아시아 전반의 보편문화였으니까 말입니다. 그래서 동아시아 문화에서 스스로 찾아낸 해결책이었다라고 평가할 수 있습니다.
세 번째는 제가 가장 중요하게 생각하는 점입니다만, 서구의 근대는 제국주의적 근대였다고 하겠는데요, 그에 비해 동아시아의 자주적인 근대화 노력은 생태적 전환을 촉구하는 근대화였다는 점입니다. 인간 중심적 사고방식에서 벗어났다는 점에서, 동학은 ‘탈인간중심’이었다고 말해도 좋겠어요. 동학이 인간중심이 아니라는 점은 최시형이 설파한 ‘삼경’에 뚜렷이 나타나 있지요. 요컨대 동학은 생태중심의 사고였어요. 지극히 존귀한 인간도 지구상의 다른 모든 존재와 동등하다는 것입니다. 동물이나 식물들도 착취의 대상은 아니라는 점이에요.
동학은 인류 문제의 생태적 해결을 촉구했다고 보고 싶어요. 최제우와 최시형의 사상은 대단히 특별한 사상이었어요. 저는 그 점을 한마디로, 자주적 근대화를 위한 절실한 노력이었다고 표현하고 싶어요. 실로 대단하지 않습니까.
그런데 우리가 동학의 방식으로 세상 문제를 순조롭게 풀어갈 수는 없었어요. 그리하여 세상을 지배하는 현실 권력과의 불행한, 물리적 충돌이 발생했습니다. 1894년에 동학농민 혁명이 일어났다는 말씀이지요. 그때 전봉준 등은 우리가 당면한 문제를 이념적으로만, 종교적으로만 풀려고 하면 절대 안 풀린다는 판단을 했어요. 현실적인 운동, 하나의 조직적인 실천 운동을 하였다는 말이지요. 그때 그 물리적 운동이 어떻게 조직됐는지, 운동의 과정이 어떠했는지, 그 시점에서 앞에서 짤막하게 언급한 마을공동체의 협동조직이 어떻게 관련되었는지 등의 문제도 우리는 장차 밀도 있게 검토하여야겠습니다.
저는 지금도 동학혁명이 진행 중이라고 생각합니다. 동학이라는 이름은 버렸으나 여러 가지 다른 명목으로 우리는 노력하고 있어요. 우리가 사는 세상을 조금이라도 더 아름답게, 더욱더 생태 중심으로 재편하는 작업이지요. 이것은 하루아침에 완성할 수 없는 큰 사업이지요. 그러나 오늘도 내일도 한 걸음씩 꾸준히 나아가야 할 길이라고 확신합니다. 요즘 벌어지고 있는 후쿠시마 문제도 그렇고, 전쟁에 반대하는 평화운동도, 반민주적인 윤석열 정권의 퇴진운동도 모두 동학혁명의 연장인 것입니다. 승부가 하루아침에 결정 나는 것은 아니지만, ‘생태적 전환’은 우리가 지향하는 새 시대의 목표이자 동학의 ‘오래된 미래’ 즉 문화투쟁의 일환입니다.
May be an image of text that says "I 'OBSERVE' God's creature with love. 'LISTEN' God's calling in silence. 敬天 G respect God) 저는 하늘의 저는하늘의뜻과행합을있는 뜻과 행함을 있는 그대로 "보고 감사히 받아들이겠습니다. I'ACCEPT' God's choice with respect. make people 'HAPPY' 三敬行 (Respectingthe Three) I make people 'UTILIZABLE' 敬人 (respect People) 사람들을 "행복하고, 쓸모있고, 의미있게" 만들겠습니다. make people 'MEANINGFUL' respect 'TOOLS' that use. respect 'SPACES' that reside in. 敬物 respect Things) 저는 "도구와 공간과, 음식"을 귀하게 여겨 소중히 쓰고, 보존하겠습니다. respect 'FOODS' that take in."
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Steven T. Katz - Wikipedia

Steven T. Katz - Wikipedia

Steven T. Katz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steven Theodore Katz (born August 24, 1944) is an American philosopher and scholar. He is the founding director of the Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies at Boston University in Massachusetts, United States, where he holds the Alvin J. and Shirley Slater Chair in Jewish and Holocaust Studies.

Biography[edit]

Katz was born in Jersey City, New Jersey.

He received his Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, England in 1972.

Prior to his appointment at Boston University, Prof. Katz taught at Dartmouth College from 1972 to 1984. He joined the faculty of Cornell University in 1984 through 1996 as a Professor of Near Eastern Studies (Judaica); during the years 1985–1989 he served as Chair of the Department of Near Eastern Studies and Director of the Jewish Studies Program. He has also held visiting posts at Yale, the University of California at Santa BarbaraHebrew University of Jerusalem, the University of PennsylvaniaYeshiva UniversityHarvard and Warwick University.

He currently edits Modern Judaism: A Journal of Jewish Ideas and Experience, published by Oxford University Press.

Academic misconduct censure[edit]

In early 1995 Katz's appointment as the director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum was announced.[1] Shortly afterward it was reported that Katz had been disciplined by Cornell for two matters. Katz had misrepresented how close a book he was writing (The Holocaust in Historical Context) was to publication. In documents dating to 1983 Katz had claimed that the book's publication was imminent on Harvard University Press, while it actually only appeared in 1994 on Oxford University Press. A 1991 Cornell report by three deans found that Katz had "knowingly and deliberately misrepresented his claims of completed and published scholarly works" in both his resume and grant applications.[2] Katz was also punished by Cornell (his salary was frozen for years) because during a 1989 sabbatical he had accepted a paid teaching position at the University of Pennsylvania, in violation of Cornell policy. Katz maintained his innocence, but in the wake of much criticism from within the Jewish community and Holocaust museum board he stepped down in March 1995.[3]

Scientific research[edit]

Mysticism[edit]

Katz adopts a "Contextualist" interpretation of mysticism, and has contributed to and edited a number of books dealing with mysticism. He distinguishes two basic approaches to the scientific study and understanding of mysticism: an "essentialist model" and a "contextualist model".[4]

The essentialist model argues that mystical experience is independent of the sociocultural, historical and religious context in which it occurs, and regards all mystical experience in its essence to be the same.[4]

The contextualist model states that mystical experiences are shaped by the concepts "which the mystic brings to, and which shape, his experience".[4] What is being experienced is being determined by the expectations and the conceptual background of the mystic.[5]

Jewish studies[edit]

Katz has argued that the Holocaust is "phenomenologically unique"[6] and the only genocide that has occurred in history, and defines Holocaust to include only "the travail of European Jewry" and not other victims of the Nazis.[7] He has argued this in depth in The Holocaust in Historical Context. In 2019 the second volume was released and the third is in the works.[citation needed]

Katz is the editor of Modern Judaism, an academic quarterly. He was on the editorial board of the Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust (NY: Macmillan, 1990, Hebrew and English-language editions).

Professor Katz acts as an American representative on the European Union sponsored International Task Force on the Holocaust. Additionally, he still holds a position as Chair of the Holocaust Commission of the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, after previously serving on the United States Holocaust Museum's Academic Committee for five years as their Chair.

Selected publications[edit]

  • Jewish Philosophers (Bloch Publishing, 1975)
  • Jewish Ideas and Concepts (Schocken Books, 1977)
  • Mysticism and Philosophical Analysis (Oxford University Press, 1978)
  • Studies by Samuel Horodezky (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Saadiah Gaon (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Maimonides: Selected Essays (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Collected papers of Jacob Guttmann (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Jewish Neo-Platonism (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Medieval Jewish Philosophy (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Mysticism and Religious Traditions (Oxford University Press, 1983)
  • Post-Holocaust Dialogues: critical studies in modern Jewish thought (New York University Press, 1983)
  • The Cambridge History of Nineteenth Century Religious Thought in the West" 3 Vols. (Cambridge University Press, 1988)
  • Anti-semitism in Times of Crisis (New York University Press, 1991)
  • Frontiers of Jewish Thought (B'nai B'rith Books, 1992)
  • Mysticism and Language (Oxford University Press, 1992)
  • Historicism, the Holocaust and Zionism: critical studies in modern Jewish thought and history (New York University Press, 1992)
  • Interpreters of Judaism in the Late Twentieth Century (B'nai B'rith Books, 1993)
  • The Holocaust and Comparative History (Leo Baeck Institute, 1993)
  • The Holocaust in Historical Context, Vol. 1 (Oxford University Press, 1994)
  • American rabbi : the life and thought of Jacob B. Agus (New York University Press, 1997)
  • Mysticism and Sacred Scripture (Oxford University Press, 2000)
  • Kontinuität und Diskontinität zwischen christlichen und nationalsozialistischem Antisemitismus (In German and English) (J.C.B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck), 2001)
  • The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish Theology (New York University Press, 2005)
  • The Cambridge History of Judaism, vol. 4: The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period (Cambridge University Press, 2006)
  • Obliged by Memory: Literature, Religion, Ethics (Syracuse University Press, 2006)
  • Wrestling with God: Jewish Theological Responses During and After the Holocaust (Oxford University Press, 2007)
  • The shtetl: new evaluations (New York University Press, 2007)

Awards[edit]

  • 1984 - National Jewish Book Award for Post-Holocaust Dialogues[8]
  • 1994 - "Outstanding book in philosophy and theology" (American Association of University Publishers) for The Holocaust in Historical Context
  • 1999 - Dr. Leopold Lucas Prize (University of Tübingen) awarded by Professor Volker Drehsen with an address entitled "Continuity and Discontinuity between Christian and Nazi Antisemitism"[9][10][11]
  • 2007 - National Jewish Book Award for Volume IV of The Cambridge History of Judaism, The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period[12]

Finalist[edit]

  • 2007 - National Jewish Book Award runner-up for Wrestling with God: Jewish Theological Responses During and After the Holocaust

References[edit]

  1. ^ Schemo, Diana Jean (4 January 1995). "Holocaust Museum Chooses Scholar as Its Next Director"The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
  2. ^ "New Director of Museum Was Censured by Cornell"The New York TimesAssociated Press. 24 February 1995. Retrieved 24 May 2023.Weinraub, Judith (23 February 1995). "NEW HOLOCAUST MUSEUM CHIEF WAS CENSURED"Washington Post. Retrieved 14 May 2023.Stannard, David E. (2020). "True Believer: The Uniqueness of Steven T. Katz". Journal of Genocide Research22 (3): 391–409. doi:10.1080/14623528.2020.1719734.
  3. ^ Witt, Karen de (4 March 1995). "Holocaust Museum's New Chief Resigns"The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
  4. Jump up to:a b c Katz 2000, p. 3.
  5. ^ Katz 2000, p. 3-4.
  6. ^ Stone, Histories of the Holocaust, p. 210: "In that book, Katz argued that the Holocaust is ‘phenomenologically unique’, a claim that has nothing to do with the philosophical school of phenomenology and apparently means nothing more than that the Holocaust was a unique phenomenon. Katz’s basic position is that it is the ‘unmediated, intended, complete physical eradication of every Jewish man, woman, and child that defines the particular, singular nature of this event that we call the Holocaust. It is this unconstrained, ideologically driven imperative that every Jew be murdered that distinguishes the Sho’ah from prior and to date subsequent, however inhumane, acts of collective violence, ethnocide, and mass murder.’ Unfortunately, this claim was the starting point of Katz’s research and not its finding; his erudition was thus placed at the outset in the service of defending a preconceived conclusion"
  7. ^ Novick, Peter (2000). The Holocaust in American Life. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 196–197.
  8. ^ "Past Winners"Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  9. ^ https://www.mohr.de/en/book/kontinuitaet-und-diskontinuitaet-zwischen-christlichem-und-nationalsozialistischem-antisemitismus-9783161475443 (both German and English)
  10. ^ "Steven T. Katz » Department of Religion | Boston University".
  11. ^ "Speech of the Prizewinner | Protestant Theology | University Tübingen"www.uni-tuebingen.de. Archived from the original on 2017-01-04.
  12. ^ "Past Winners"Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 2020-01-24.

Sources[edit]

  • Katz, Steven T. (2000), Mysticism and Sacred Scripture, Oxford University Press