Nathan Katz
Florida International University
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Philosophy East and West | 1986
Frank J. Hoffman; Nathan Katz
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Numen | 1995
Nathan Katz
This comparative study of the religious life of the Jewish communities of Kaifeng, China, and Cochin, India, contributes to our understanding the mechanisms by which a religion becomes acculturated into its environment. Borrowing the metaphor of foregrounding/backgrounding from Gestalt psychology, both the plasticity and tenacity of Judaism are emphasized.
The Journal of Asian Studies | 1997
Jael Silliman; Nathan Katz
The seven contributions in this volume analyse the historical, social and religious identity in three distinct communities of Indian Jews the Cochin Jews the Bene Israel and the Baghdadi Jews. The authors address historical development, social interaction with Gentle neighbours modernization and the influence of Zionism and the role of religion.
Archive | 2007
Nathan Katz
Hindu-Jewish dialogue is a two-millennia ongoing conversation on a variety of topics between two great civilizations, Indic and Judaic. At times, it has happened on a speculative and abstract level, similar in many ways to what we mean today by the comparative study of religions. At other times, it has been literary, and at other times, practical in both the commercial and political-diplomatic sense.
Studies in History | 2005
Nathan Katz
Three very different types of data must be considered in any attempt at constructing a history of the ancient Jewish community of Kochi in Kerala. There are scant historical data—a third-century patristic letter, a ninth-century Muslim travelogue, an eleventh-century royal charter engraved on copperplates, a twelfth-century Hebrew tombstone. There are numerous motifs from Kochini folklore, especially the intriguing Malayalam songs of Jewish women. Finally, there are indigenous narrations by which the community presents itself to the outside world. Even taken together, these three types of data do not yield a comprehensive history. But what they do reveal is perhaps more significant; they chart the communitys crafting for themselves a niche within the social framework of Kerala. In sum, in their narrations they create an identity that resonates exceptionally well with both Indian and Jewish values, themes and motifs.
Journal of the American Oriental Society | 1985
James P. McDermott; Nathan Katz
All forms of Buddhism affirm the perfectability of the person, and one finds this notion of perfection embodied in three images: the Arahant, the Bodhisattva and the Mahasiddha. Much of this book is a re-examination of the arahant image as found in Theravada literature.
International Migration Review | 1990
Y. W. Cheung; K. M. de Silva; P. Duke; Ellen S. Goldberg; Nathan Katz
Archive | 1993
Nathan Katz; Ellen S. Goldberg
Archive | 2000
Nathan Katz
The Journal of Asian Studies | 1987
Nathan Katz; Thomas A. Timberg