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Leonard Cohen's troubled relationship with God is here mapped onto his troubled relationships with sex and politics. Analysing Covenantal theology and its place in Cohen's work, this book is the first to trace a consistent theology across sixty years of Cohen's writing, drawing on his Jewish heritage and its expression in his lyrics and poems.
Cohen's commitment to covenant, and his anger at this God who made us so prone to failing it, undergird the faith, frustration, and sardonic taunting of Cohen's work. Both his faith and ire are traced through:
· Cohen's unorthodox use of Jewish and Christian imagery
· His writings about women, politics, and the Holocaust
· His final theology, You Want It Darker, released three weeks before his death.
This book is the first to trace a consistent theology across sixty years of Cohen's writing, drawing on his Jewish heritage and how it is expressed in his unusual use of Jewish and Christian imagery and in his writings about women, politics, and the Holocaust.
The first volume to identify and trace a consistent covenantal theology and theodicy in Cohen's works
Identifies and explicates major poetic approaches employed throughout Cohen's writings
Sets Cohen's infamous relations with women in the context not only of romance or sex but the existential importance of the covenantal bond
Describes Cohen's relational understanding of covenant, drawn from his Jewish heritage
Introduction and Biographical Sketch
Chapter One: Theodicy: Arguments With God about Evil, Suffering, and God Himself
Chapter Two: Covenantal Theology and its Place in Cohen's Work
Chapter Three: From Covenantal Theology to Theodicy: Failing Covenant with God and Persons
Chapter Four: Failing Covenant with God and Persons: Doubled Imagery in Cohen's Work
Chapter Five: Those who did not fail covenant: Moses and Jesus-Cohen's Jewish and Christian Imagery
Chapter Six: The Double Bind That Is Not a Bond: Cohen and Women
Chapter Seven: Betrayal of God, Betrayal of Persons, Political Betrayals-Cohen's Trinity
Concluding Remarks: You Want It Darker and Thanks for the Dance-Cohen's Last Creed
Bibliography
Index
Marcia Pally offers here an immensely rich theological interpretation of the work of legendary Canadian poet-musician Leonard Cohen. The key theological theme I see is Cohen's claim that we human beings were made for covenant with God and one another and yet the way we were made – or the way we have turned out – makes it immensely difficult for us to keep the very covenants that we need. So the human condition is tragic, and the tragedy may ultimately be traceable to the very God who alone is our source and our destiny. This book makes me want to marinate in the music and poetry, though not the lifestyle, of Leonard Cohen. It also deepens my immense appreciation for the impressive intellectual range of Marcia Pally. This is a tour de force.
Marcia Pally has written an absolutely brilliant and arresting book about the lyrics of Leonard Cohen. Cohen's lyrics have fascinated me for many years - a descendant of rabbis, he has done the remarkable thing of writing prophecy and social criticism into his lyrics. Marcia Pally's book analyzes his extraordinary talent. Please read it!
Drawing upon the entirety of Cohen's creative output, including his oft-overlooked novels, Marcia Pally takes Cohen seriously as a religious thinker, “a mystic for the post secular age,” in the words of Aubrey Glazer. Pally swaps out Hank Williams, Bob Dylan, Irving Layton and Federico García Lorca in favor of Rosenzweig, Heschel, Levinas, and Wolfson as she recontextualizes Cohen as a poet engaged in a lifelong wrestling match with the Almighty. The listener-or reader, in this case-comes out the winner.
From This Broken Hill I Sing to You is must reading for those like myself who are torn between our devotion to Leonard Cohen's work and our dismay at his personal history with women. By painstakingly charting the poet/singer's lifelong struggle to reconcile his covenantal relationships (with God and women) with his real-life behavior, Marcia Pally has forged a deeply compelling new covenant between Cohen and us, his acolytes. To which, I say Hallelujah!
Marcia Pally's From This Broken Hill I Sing to You is a superb book, from Moshe Halbertal's inspired foreword to the piercing last chapter on Leonard Cohen's last creed. The writing is sophisticated and accessible, fully up to the task of realizing the deep philosophic-anthropological and theological dimensions of Cohen's work. The subtitle of the book, God, Sex Politics in the Work of Leonard Cohen, is only partly accurate - the book far more. There is a movement of the study of Cohen's terse verse, and this book summarizes that work well and advances it with a decided focus on Cohen's struggle with the tortured relationship between the mortal and the eternal. As someone whose relationship with “Old Priest” was rooted in theological discussions (Lurianic Kabbalah), it is such a pleasure to see his depth so beautifully and originally articulated.
I have always loved Leonard's work, and loved him personally, and knew that HE was the man along with Beatles, whose work would survive musically. Marcia Pally's masterful book reveals that as a poet, songwriter, philosopher and ultimate mensch, Leonard Cohen, his work and his spirit are here for ALL TIME!!
Marcia Pally is Professor in Multilingual Multicultural Studies at New York University, USA, and held the Mercator Guest Professorship in the Theology Faculty at Humboldt University-Berlin (Germany), where she is now a regular Guest Professor.