Kurzvita
Agata Paluch ist eine Historikerin, die sich auf jüdisches Wissen, Kultur und Religion spezialisiert hat, mit Schwerpunkt auf dem mittelalterlichen und frühneuzeitlichen Mittel- und Osteuropa (Aschkenas). Ihre Forschungsinteressen umfassen die Geschichte der jüdischen Esoterik, Magie und Kabbala sowie die jüdische Buchgeschichte und materielle Textkulturen. Sie promovierte 2013 am University College London in Hebräischen und Jüdischen Studien. Bevor sie als Professorin für Vormoderne Jüdische Studien an die Universität zu Köln wechselte, leitete sie eine DFG-geförderte Forschungsgruppe "Patterns of Knowledge Circulation" an der Freien Universität Berlin (2019-2025), die untersuchte, wie das Zusammenspiel von jüdischer Manuskriptkultur und frühem Buchdruck die Übermittlung esoterischen Wissens im frühneuzeitlichen Ostmitteleuropa prägte. Sie erhielt außerdem Stipendien von der Gerda Henkel Stiftung, dem Herbert D. Katz Institute for Advanced Judaic Studies und der Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung und war als Katalogisiererin der bedeutenden hebräischen Handschriftensammlung der British Library tätig.
Ausgewählte Veröffentlichungen
Monographie
- Megalleh ‘Amuqot: The Enoch-Metatron Tradition in the Kabbalah of Nathan Neta Shapira ofKraków (1585-1633), Los Angeles-Jerusalem: Cherub Press, 2014
Sammelbände:
- Representing Jewish Thought: Proceedings of the 2015 Institute of Jewish Studies Conference Held in Honour of Professor Ada Rapoport-Albert, ed. Agata Paluch (IJS Studies in Judaica; Leiden: Brill, 2021)
- Kabbalah and Knowledge Transfers in Early Modernity, ed. Agata Paluch, Patrick B. Koch, special issue of European Journal of Jewish Studies 16.1 (2022)
- Kabbalistic Afterlives: Copies, Reproductions, and Textual Circulation in the Making of Kabbalah in Postmedieval Ashkenaz, ed. Agata Paluch, special issue of Aschkenas 34.2 (2024)
Artikel/ Buchkapitel:
- "Between Active Matter and Letters: Kabbalah, Natural Knowledge, and Jewish How-To Books in Early Modern East-Central Europe," Early Science and Medicine 29 (2024): 271-303
- "On Making Jewish Books in the Early Modern Period," European Journal of Jewish Studies 18 (2024): 155-163
- "On Loss and Recovery: Manuscript Remediations, Digital Simulacra, and the Conditions of Kabbalistic Material Text," in Editing Kabbalistic Texts, ed. Bill Rebiger, Gerold Necker, Studies in Magic and Kabbalah 2 (Harrassowitz, 2024)
- "Kabbalistic Afterlives: Copies, Reproductions, and Textual Circulation in the Making of Postmedieval Kabbalah in Eastern and Central Europe (Ashkenaz)", Aschkenas 34.2 (2024)
- "Entertaining Knowledge: Play and Chance in Premodern Kabbalistic Recipe Books," Jewish Quarterly Review 113.4 (2023): 571-578
- "On Practical Uses of Ten Sefirot: Material Readings in an Early Modern Kabbalistic Collectaneum (MS Michael 473)," Harvard Theological Review 116.2 (2023): 276-301
- “Metatron Revisited: Prayers, Adjurations, and the Fashioning of Interpretive Authority in Jewish Mystical, Magical, and Practical Texts,” Entangled Religions 12.6 (2022)
- “The Circulation of Jewish Esoteric Knowledge in Manuscript and Print: The Case of Early Modern East-Central Europe,’ in Print Culture at the Crossroads: The Book and Central Europe, ed. Elizabeth Dillenburg, Howard Louthan, & Drew Thomas (The Library of the Written Word 94; Leiden: Brill, 2021), 472-493
- “Copying, Compiling, Commonplacing: Sefer Heshek and the Kabbalah of Divine Names in Early Modern Ashkenaz”, in Representing Jewish Thought: Proceedings of the 2015 IJS Conference Held in Honour of Professor Ada Rapoport-Albert, ed. Agata Paluch (IJS Studies in Judaica; Leiden: Brill, 2021), 100-125
- “Intentionality and Kabbalistic Practices in Early Modern East-Central Europe”, Aries: Journal for the Study of Western Esotericism 19 (2019), 83-111
- “The Ashkenazi Profile of Kabbalah: Some Aspects of Megalleh ‘Amuqot ReNaV Ofanim ‘al Ve-Ethanan of Nathan Shapira of Kraków’, *Kabbalah: Journal for the Study of Jewish Mystical Texts 25 (2011), 109-133
Öffentliches Engagement:
- “Making Sense of Recipes for Amulets and Natural Magic, Kabbalistic Style (Marginalia Included),” The Recipes Project: Food, Magic, Art, Science and Medicine, October 07, 2021: https://recipes.hypotheses.org/18113
- “Writing on Hands: Practical and Kabbalistic Manual Devices,” Knowledge in Circulation: The Reception and Transmission of Jewish Esoteric Knowledge in Manuscripts and Print in Early Modern East-Central Europe, January 16, 2021: https://esknowcirc.hypotheses.org/297
- “Practical Kabbalah and Practical Knowledge: Kabbalistic Manuals and Natural Knowledge in Early Modern East-Central Europe,” History of Knowledge, April 11, 2019: https://historyofknowledge.net/2019/04/11/practical-kabbalah/
- “The Power of Language in Jewish Kabbalah and Magic: How To Do (and Undo) Things with Words,” The Polonsky Foundation Catalogue of Digitised Hebrew Manuscripts, February 29, 2016: https://www.bl.uk/hebrew-manuscripts/articles/the-power-of-language-in-jewish-kabbalah