Leo Baeck (1873-1956) was a rabbi, public intellectual, and the official
leader of German Jewry during the Holocaust. The Jewish Imperial
Imagination shows the myriad ways in which the German imperial
enterprise left its imprint on his religious and political thought, and
on modern Judaism more generally. This book is the first to explore
Baeck's religious thought as political, and situate it within the
imperial context of the period which is often ignored in discussions of
modern Jewish thought. Baeck's work during the Holocaust is analysed
in-depth, drawing on unpublished manuscripts written in Nazi Germany and
in the Theresienstadt Ghetto. In the process Yaniv Feller raises new
questions about the nature of Jewish missionizing and the German-Jewish
imagination of the East as a space for colonisation. He thus develops
the concept of the 'Jewish imperial imagination', moving beyond a simple
dichotomy of ascribing to or resisting hegemonic narratives.