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  • 1
    ISBN: 9789004345331
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (374 pages)
    Year of publication: 2017
    Series Statement: Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism Volume 181
    Series Statement: Biblical Studies, Ancient Near East and Early Christianity E-Books Online
    Series Statement: Collection 2017
    Series Statement: Brill online books and journals
    Series Statement: E-books
    Series Statement: Journal for the study of Judaism Supplements to the Journal for the study of Judaism
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Talmudic transgressions
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Boyarin, Daniel Congresses ; Boyarin, Daniel ; Talmud Congresses Criticism, interpretation, etc ; Talmud ; Rabbinical literature Congresses History and criticism ; Rabbinical literature ; Conference papers and proceedings ; Criticism, interpretation, etc ; Festschrift ; Konferenzschrift 2014 ; Boyarin, Daniʾel 1946- ; Talmud ; Rabbinische Literatur
    Abstract: Preliminary Material -- Authorial Intent: Human and Divine /Azzan Yadin-Israel -- A Place of Torah /Moulie Vidas -- Tosafot Gornish Post-Kant: The Talmud as Political Thought /Sergey Dolgopolski -- Did the Rabbis Consider Nazirhood an Ascetic Practice? /Aharon Shemesh -- “The Torah was not Given to Ministering Angels”: Rabbinic Aspirationalism /Christine Hayes -- Footnotes to Carnal Israel: Infertility and the Legal Subject /Barry Scott Wimpfheimer -- Temporalities of Marriage: Jewish and Islamic Legal Debates /Lena Salaymeh and Zvi Septimus -- Myth, History and Eschatology in a Rabbinic Treatise on Birth /Galit Hasan-Rokem and Israel Jacob Yuval -- Rabbinic Trickster Tales: The Sex and Gender Politics of the Bavli’s Sinful Sages /Julia Watts Belser -- Phallic Jewissance and the Pleasure of No Pleasure /Elliot R. Wolfson -- “Changing the Order of Creation”: The Toldot Ben Sira Disrupts the Medieval Hebrew Canon /Shamma Boyarin -- Paul and Jewish Ethnicity /Erich S. Gruen -- Paul and the Universal Goyim: “A Radical Jew” Revisited /Ishay Rosen-Zvi and Adi Ophir -- Kinship and Qiddushin: Genealogy and Geography in born Qiddushin iv /Jonathan Boyarin -- Paul in the Jerusalem of Lithuania: Samuel Joseph Fuenn’s Paths of God /Eliyahu Stern -- Revisiting the Fat Rabbis /Zvi Septimus -- Socrates, the Rabbis and the Virgin: The Dialogic Imagination in Late Antiquity /Virginia Burrus -- What Would Martin Luther Say to Daniel Boyarin? /Simon Goldhill -- The Battle of Qedesh on the Plain of Ḥatsor: On the Hasmonean Roots of the Galilean Foundational Myth /Elchanan Reiner -- As the Gates of Jerusalem, so the Gates of Maḥuza: Defining Place in Diaspora /Charlotte Elisheva Fonrobert -- Following Goats: Text, Place and Diaspora(s) /Dina Stein -- Crossing Border Lines: Daniel Boyarin’s Life/Work /James Adam Redfield -- List of Publications -- Index of Talmudic Sources -- Index of Subjects.
    Abstract: Talmudic Transgressions is a collection of essays on rabbinic literature and related fields in response to the boundary-pushing scholarship of Daniel Boyarin. This work is an attempt to transgress boundaries in various ways, since boundaries differentiate social identities, literary genres, legal practices, or diasporas and homelands. These essays locate the transgressive not outside the classical traditions but in these traditions themselves, having learned from Boyarin that it is often within the tradition and in its terms that we can find challenges to accepted notions of knowledge, text, and ethnic or gender identity. The sections of this volume attempt to mirror this diverse set of topics. Contributors include Julia Watts Belser, Jonathan Boyarin, Shamma Boyarin, Virginia Burrus, Sergey Dolgopolski, Charlotte E. Fonrobert, Simon Goldhill, Erich S. Gruen, Galit Hasan-Rokem, Christine Hayes, Adi Ophir, James Redfield, Elchanan Reiner, Ishay Rosen-Zvi, Lena Salaymeh, Zvi Septimus, Aharon Shemesh, Dina Stein, Eliyahu Stern, Moulie Vidas, Barry Scott Wimpfheimer, Elliot R. Wolfson, Azzan Yadin-Israel, Israel Yuval, and Froma Zeitlin
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789047410737
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 211 pages)
    Year of publication: 2006
    Series Statement: Studies on the texts of the desert of Judah v. 62
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Associated Literature. International Symposium (8th : 2003) Rabbinic perspectives
    Keywords: Dead Sea scrolls Congresses ; Dead Sea scrolls ; Rabbinical literature Congresses History and criticism ; Jewish law Congresses Comparative studies ; Jewish law ; Rabbinical literature ; Conference papers and proceedings ; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Abstract: Preliminary Material /Steven D. Fraade , Aharon Shemesh and Ruth A. Clements -- Tannaitic Halakhah and Qumran—A Re-Evaluation /Joseph M. Baumgarten -- Parallels without “Parallelomania”: Methodological Reflections on Comparative Analysis of Halakhah in the Dead Sea Scrolls /Lutz Doering -- Looking for Narrative Midrash at Qumran /Steven D. Fraade -- Traces of Sectarian Halakhah in the Rabbinic World /Vered Noam -- Reconstructing Qumranic and Rabbinic Worldviews: Dynamic Holiness vs. Static Holiness /Eyal Regev -- Prohibited Marriages in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Rabbinic Literature /Lawrence H. Schiffman -- Seclusion and Exclusion: The Rhetoric of Separation in Qumran and Tannaitic Literature /Adiel Schremer -- The History of the Creation of Measurements: Between Qumran and the Mishnah /Aharon Shemesh -- Oral Torah vs. Written Torah(s): Competing Claims to Authority /Cana Werman -- Index of Modern Authors /Steven D. Fraade , Aharon Shemesh and Ruth A. Clements -- Index of Ancient Sources /Steven D. Fraade , Aharon Shemesh and Ruth A. Clements.
    Abstract: The studies in this volume examine the intersection of the Dead Sea Scrolls with early rabbinic literature. This is a particularly rich area for comparative study, which has not heretofore received sufficient scholarly attention. While some of the contributions in this volume focus on specific comparative case studies, others address far-reaching issues of historical and comparative methodology. Particular attention is paid to questions of the nature of sectarian and rabbinic law, and how each may elucidate the other. These studies model the directions that need to be pursued in future scholarship on the lines of continuity and discontinuity that connect and differentiate these two literary corpora and their respective religious cultures and social structures
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes
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