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Rachel Feldhay Brenner is Assistant Professor of Modern Hebrew Literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is the author of two books and numerous articles. Her forthcoming book is entitled Searching the Self in the World of the Holocaust: Edith Stein, Simone Weil, Anne Frank, and Etty Hillesum (Penn State Press).

Edward Breuer is Assistant Professor of Religion (Judaica) at the University of Pennsylvania. He has published articles on the Haskalah and other aspects of modern Jewish history in Zion and the Harvard Theological Review. His study, The Limits of Enlightenment, has recently been published by Harvard University Press.

Maurice Friedman is Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, Philosophy, and Comparative Literature at San Diego State University. He has translated, edited, and introduced many of Martin Buber’s works and is the author, among many other books, of Martin Buber: The Life of Dialogue, Martin Buber’s Life and Work (3 vols., 1981 ff.), and Martin Buber and the Eternal (1986).

Michael Oppenheim is an Associate Professor in the Department of Religion at Concordia University in Montreal. Among his works are: Mutual Upholding: Fashioning Jewish Philosophy Through Letters (1992), and Speaking/Writing of God: Jewish Philosophical Reflections on the Life with Others (forthcoming).

Gideon Shimoni is Professor of Modern Jewish Studies at the Institute for Contemporary Jewish Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has edited a number of volumes including Contemporary Jewish Civilization (1985) and The Holocaust in University Teaching (1992). His major study, Zionist Ideology, appeared in 1995.

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