Jump to content

Shmuel Trigano

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iskandar323 (talk | contribs) at 19:37, 24 October 2023 (Removing again, per WP:BIBLIOGRAPHIES - this material, aside from being wholly unsourced, without an ISBN in sight, is out-of-style with the style guide, with all caps titles for one section, and patchy, wholly foreign language material in the other, with missing dates, publishers, trans titles, etc.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Shmuel Trigano, April 2013

Shmuel Trigano (Hebrew: שמואל טריגנו; born in 1948 in Blida, French Algeria) is a sociologist, philosopher, professor emeritus of sociology at Paris Nanterre University (Chair "Sociology of knowledge, religion and politics" ). He was Tikvah Fund Visiting Professor in Jewish Law and Thought at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, New York (2009), and Templeton Fellow at the Herzl Institute (Jerusalem) program "Philosophy of the Tanakh, Midrash and Talmud" (2012-2013), (2015-2017). Elia Benamozegh European Chair of Sephardic Studies, Livorno, Italy (2002).[citation needed][1]

Trigano is Bachelor of Arts (at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Political Science, International Relations), M.A. in Political Science (Paris II University 1977),[2] PhD in Political Sociology at Paris Nanterre University ("The religious genesis of the Political Modernity in Judaism" - 1981).[3][1]

Trigano founded two journals, the The Journal of Jewish Studies "Pardes, Revue européenne d'études juives", Ed. du Cerf, In-Press Editions (1985- today). Co-founded with Annie Kriegel (1926-1995),[citation needed] and the The Journal of Political Ideas "Controverses" Ed. De l’Eclat (2006- 2011).[citation needed][1]

Prizes

  • Edmond Tenoudji Prize for Jewish Education, 1993.[4]
  • French Jewry Foundation, Francine and Antoine Bernheim Prize, Prize for the Sciences, 2011.
  • The Impertinents 2013 Prize of the newspaper Le Figaro, for his book "La Nouvelle idéologie dominante"[5]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Shmuel Trigano". Encyclopaedia Judaica. 2008.
  2. ^ http://www.sudoc.fr/01760642X [archive].
  3. ^ Dir. Annie Kriegel, président Emmanuel Levinas, et Charles Touati (jury) : http://www.sudoc.fr/041124197 [archive]. Publication en 1984 sous le titre La demeure oubliée. Genèse religieuse du politique dans le judaïsme, ed. Lieu Commun; réédition en Tel Gallimard en 1994. Traduction italienne: Alle radici della modernità, genesi religiosa del politico, ECIG, 1999.
  4. ^ "Liste des Lauréats". RFECJ.
  5. ^ ActuaLitté [archive], 24/10/2013