“Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School

Across Psychoanalysis, Jewish Studies and History, rarely has a single essay raised a debate comparable to the one triggered by Freud’s last book Moses and Monotheism. The aim of this paper is to explore it once more from the perspective of the rhetoric of the historical discourse. In the first part...

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Main Author: Nethanel Treves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDEC 2017-12-01
Series:Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=397
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spelling doaj-1cff1790698b4eb584da95073abb73802021-02-02T07:55:52ZengFondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDECQuest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History2037-741X2037-741X2017-12-01122058“Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales SchoolNethanel Treves0Indipendent ScholarAcross Psychoanalysis, Jewish Studies and History, rarely has a single essay raised a debate comparable to the one triggered by Freud’s last book Moses and Monotheism. The aim of this paper is to explore it once more from the perspective of the rhetoric of the historical discourse. In the first part we will make use of Michel de Certeau’s and Roland Barthes’ works on the writing of history in order to examine its relation to historiography. We will try to show how Freud undermined the very bases of the discipline questioning its scientific and more positivist character (rather than being questioned by it) and pointing toward trajectories that will be fully undertaken only at a later time. In the second part we will analyze the affinities and the echoes between Freud’s methodology and the historiographical revolution accomplished by the French School of the Annales in those same years, outlining a pattern of transformation of the discipline prefigured and explored, in their own way, by both Freud and the French historians. http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=397FreudMosesRoland BarthesMichel De Certeau
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nethanel Treves
spellingShingle Nethanel Treves
“Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History
Freud
Moses
Roland Barthes
Michel De Certeau
author_facet Nethanel Treves
author_sort Nethanel Treves
title “Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
title_short “Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
title_full “Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
title_fullStr “Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
title_full_unstemmed “Moses and Monotheism” as History. Reading Freud through de Certau, Barthes and the Annales School
title_sort “moses and monotheism” as history. reading freud through de certau, barthes and the annales school
publisher Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDEC
series Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History
issn 2037-741X
2037-741X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Across Psychoanalysis, Jewish Studies and History, rarely has a single essay raised a debate comparable to the one triggered by Freud’s last book Moses and Monotheism. The aim of this paper is to explore it once more from the perspective of the rhetoric of the historical discourse. In the first part we will make use of Michel de Certeau’s and Roland Barthes’ works on the writing of history in order to examine its relation to historiography. We will try to show how Freud undermined the very bases of the discipline questioning its scientific and more positivist character (rather than being questioned by it) and pointing toward trajectories that will be fully undertaken only at a later time. In the second part we will analyze the affinities and the echoes between Freud’s methodology and the historiographical revolution accomplished by the French School of the Annales in those same years, outlining a pattern of transformation of the discipline prefigured and explored, in their own way, by both Freud and the French historians.
topic Freud
Moses
Roland Barthes
Michel De Certeau
url http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=397
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