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Description

This book contextualizes Rabbinic Judaism by emphasizing that the framers of Rabbinic thought were in conversation with cultures different from their own as much as with their own tradition. In a series of seven essays, presented here for the first time, the authors challenge the reader's assumptions about Judaism in the Second Temple period, late antiquity, and the early medieval era. Arranged in chronological order according to the period of time they focus on, the essays analyze texts such as the Hebrew Bible, Greco-Roman Egyptian texts, Greek and Latin works, the Dead Sea Scrolls, early and late midrashic texts, the New Testament, the Church fathers' writings, the Jerusalem and the Babylonian Talmuds, and Zoroastrian texts.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Preface
Chapter 2 1. Legal Acts and Codification in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Chapter 3 2. The Term Midrash in Tannaitic Literature
Chapter 4 3. Polemics and Rabbinic Liturgy
Chapter 5 4. Rabbinizing Jesus, Christianizing the Son of David: The Bavli's Approach to the Secondary Messiah Traditions
Chapter 6 5. 'He in His Cloak and She in Her Cloak:' Conflicting Images of Sexuality in Sasanian Mesopotamia
Chapter 7 6. Rabbi Shimon Bar Yohai: Literary Motifs
Chapter 8 7. Visions of Egypt in Midrash: The Nile as the Landscape of the Other
Part 9 Index

Product details

Published Jan 26 2007
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 272
ISBN 9780761835165
Imprint University Press of America
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Rivka Ulmer

Contributor

Mayer Gruber

Contributor

Reuven Kimelman

Contributor

Yaakov Elman

Contributor

Herbert Basser

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