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Federal and state funding of € 9.2 million for a long-term academy project at 51 and Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Approximately 40,000 letters from Martin Buber's
correspondence with his contemporaries exist, but to this day, they have hardly
been accessible. A funding commitment from the federal and state governments
should now change this: an academy project for the digitalisation and annotation
of this valuable estate will be funded with almost € 400,000 per year.
FRANKFURT. Literature,
art, theology – Martin Buber, one of the most influential thinkers of the
modern German-Jewish intellectual world was in active exchange with the
representatives and institutions in almost every area of intellectual life.
More than 40,000 letters that were written by or to him have been handed down –
particularly in the philosopher's estate in Jerusalem, but also scattered
throughout archives around the world. Making this research treasure accessible
– that is the goal of the new academy project that Professor Christian Wiese, scholar
in the field of Jewish Studies and holder of the Martin-Buber-Chair in Jewish
Religious Philosophy at 51, can now tackle thanks to the funds awarded
by the federal and state governments. All the letters are to be digitalised as
facsimile, and a large portion will also be transcribed, translated and
annotated. The project is designed for 24 years and will be funded with € 9.2
million, of which half will come from the Federal Ministry of Education and
Research and half from the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Research and
the Arts. Professor Martin Leiner (Friedrich Schiller University Jena),
Professor Abigail Gillman (Boston University) and the National Library of Israel
are cooperation partners.
“This is wonderful news." Professor Birgitta Wolff, President of Goethe
University, is delighted about the grant. “With this academy project, Christian
Wiese is setting new standards and planting the seed for a work that fits the
time in every way," Wolff remarks, adding that the project is an important
contribution to internationalisation in the digital humanities. “It is in fact
quite special. There is nothing like it in other countries," says Professor
Christian Wiese, who in 2019 concluded one of the last volumes of the edition
of Martin Buber's published writings. The edition of the letters opens
additional perspectives into Buber's life and work and his many interests – but
also into intellectual life overall in the decades between the first World War
and Buber's death in 1965. “Where, if not in Frankfurt, should this project
have its home?" observes Wiese.
“The correspondence of Buber, who lived in
Heppenheim and taught in Frankfurt, can contribute important new insights to
the history of the twentieth century. Especially in our polarised time, we can
learn a lot from the philosopher's approach, which always relied on dialogue
and understanding. Christian Wiese's academy project is for this reason also an
exceptional one in Hessen's research landscape in the humanities. I am very
happy that we can co-fund this project and wish it great success," says
Hessen's minister for Higher Education, Research and the Arts Angela Dorn.
Martin Buber (1868 – 1965) worked at the University
of Frankfurt am Main from 1924 to 1933 – first as lecturer and later as
honorary professor for Jewish religious teachings and ethics. He resigned from
the professorship in 1933 after Hitler took power in anticipation of having his
professorship revoked. He subsequently worked on setting up the Central Office
for Jewish Adult Education with the Reichsvertretung of German Jews until it
was forced to give up its work. Buber emigrated to Israel in 1938 before the
November pogrom. Throughout his entire life, Martin Buber was in contact with
personalities from all areas of intellectual life, including many writers such
as Margarete Susman, Hermann Hesse, Arnold Zweig, Thomas Mann and Franz Kafka.
Here, he did not shy away from controversial discussions. “The letters are a
fascinating mirror of the time and reveal the intellectual network in which
Buber was involved," says Christian Wiese. Perhaps a quarter of the letters
were written by Martin Buber; the rest were written to him. But Martin Buber's personality
and thought are reflected in these as well.
As part of the project, the letters, which
are primarily located in Europe, Israel and the USA, are now to be collected
and grouped according to thematic modules that stretch over several years,
and made digitally accessible in close collaboration with the Academy of
Sciences and Literature in Mainz. Depending on the content, transcripts and –
where necessary – translations from the Hebrew along with annotations will be
added. The academy project provides for three editorial positions and a
doctoral scholarship. Annual conferences are planned, as well as intensive
cooperation with researchers in Israel and the USA. The positions will be
advertised soon so that work can start in the spring.
“Martin Buber and his work are more
relevant than ever,“ says Professor Wiese with conviction. “He is one of the
most important dialogic thinkers of the twentieth century, and his texts are relevant
wherever intercultural or interreligious dialogue takes place. At the same time,
they possess great meaning for issues of political ethics."
Images
may be downloaded here:
Caption:
This letter to Hermann Hesse was written on 16 September 1945, the day after Yom
Kippur, and is the first letter that the philosopher sent from Jerusalem to
Germany after the war and the Shoah.
Further
information
Prof. Dr. Christian Wiese
Martin Buber Chair for Jewish Religious Philosophy
Faculty 06
51
Phone: +49 69 798-33313
E-Mail c.wiese@em.uni-frankfurt.de
Internet: