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Narrative and Document in the Rabbinic Canon - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

DKK 388.00
1

Narrative and Document in the Rabbinic Canon - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Implicit Norms of Rabbinic Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Implicit Norms of Rabbinic Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Implicit norms of law and theology governed in Rabbinic Judaism from the onset of its canon in the Mishnah (concluded at ca. 200) to its climax in the Talmud of Babylonia four centuries later. These norms of conviction and conception prevailed in a complete system, which was logically present, if not fully realized, from the very beginning of the canon. Norms of belief, not only behavior, governed in the canonical documents of Rabbinic Judaism and defined its orthodoxy and its heterodoxy. This book proves that proposition by asking, what are the theological premises of the documents upon which the Rabbinic canon was built and do these premises cohere in a tight theological system? The Implicit Norms of Rabbinic Judaism answers this question by identifying the principles that had to govern in order for a given composition to be articulated or a particular composite to be assembled. Those premises at the foundations of the canonical documents prove not episodic, but coherent. The documents speak, so it is universally maintained, for the community of the Rabbinic sages that sponsored them. Hence the premises and presuppositions of a document represent the consensus of the Rabbinic sages: the implicit norms of attitude and action. Canonical orthodoxy and heresy come to definition in those norms. How individuals conformed, and what institutions functioned to enforce conformity, do not figure into this account. It suffices to show that orthodoxy and heresy constituted native categories of the Rabbinic system of thought inherent in principal documents of the canon.

DKK 388.00
1

Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The collection Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism: Fourth Series commences with two historical theological essays, one on the apologetics of Judaism, the other on its soteriology. Both were written in response to invitations to contribute to collections of historical theology. Dr. Arvind Sharma of McGill University asked for the first chapter, posing a set of penetrating questions. It was to frame an essay of criticism of Judaism. The essay then responds to his program and problem with an apologetic composed out of the history of Judaism. The second is written for a forthcoming volume on soteriology in ancient Judaism and Christianity. It deals with the resurrection of the dead and the Messiah in Rabbinic documents. The second set of two essays deals with the canon of Rabbinic Judaism. Chapter Three responds to the request of Professor Bruce D. Chilton for a brief introduction to the Rabbinic canon. The fourth systematically compares two Midrash-compilations devoted to the same book of Scripture. It applies the documentary hypothesis of the Rabbinic canon to a particular problem. Chapter Five is an effort at constructive theology. It is the Jack Chester Memorial Lecture for the Tenth Anniversary Celebration of the Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies at the University of Miami. Two brief reviews complete the collection of six months of work.

DKK 388.00
1

Jeremiah in Talmud and Midrash - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Rabbinic Theology and Israelite Prophecy - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Great Ideas in the Western Literary Canon - Wayne Cristaudo - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Salesman Has a Birthday - Stephen A. Marino - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Lost Documents of Rabbinic Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Praxis and Parable - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Rabbis, the Law, and the Prophets - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Rabbis and the Prophets - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Rabbis and the Prophets - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Prophets of Scripture are subverted by the Rabbis of the Talmud and Midrash. In the Rabbinic canon, the Prophets are represented as a miscellaneous mass of proof-texts, made up of one clause or sentence at a time. The Scripture''s prophetic writings cited in clauses and phrases in the Rabbinic canon lose their integrity and cease to speak in fully coherent paragraphs and chapters. The same prophets, however, came to whole and coherent expression in other venues established by those same Rabbis. So the Rabbis of late antiquity took over writings from what they recognized as ancient times and of divine origin and they re-presented selections of those writings in accord with their own project''s requirements, glossing clauses of the prophetic Scriptures but not whole, propositional discourses. This monograph shows how they did so. It portrays the formal patterns of the Rabbis'' subversive glosses. Why impose the chaos of glosses on the orderly declaration of Scripture? It was to take possession of Scriptural prophecy that the Rabbinic authors imposed their characteristic forms and distinctive topics—-the characteristic categories and tasks and propositions. The Rabbinic canonical writings took over, imparting upon the received heritage of Scripture and tradition whatever they chose to treat as authoritative. They did with these selected compositions whatever they wanted. They Rabbinized Scripture in full awareness of how in the process they recast Scripture''s own forms and purposes. The Rabbis were perfectly capable of recapitulating prophetic writings as coherent statements. This they did in providing for lections for Sabbaths and festivals.

DKK 397.00
1

The Program of the Fathers According to Rabbi Nathan A - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Program of the Fathers According to Rabbi Nathan A - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Of the score of documents in the Rabbinic canon that reached closure in late antiquity, the first six centuries of the Common Era, the Fathers According to Rabbi Nathan Text A (Abot de Rabbi Natan, henceforward: ARNA) proves the most difficult to classify in the canonical context. It presents a challenge because it is different in its indicative traits from any other in the Rabbinic documents of its period. In the conclusion, (Chapter Forty-Five), Neusner explains what is at stake for the documentary hypothesis of the Rabbinic canon in that observation. Jacob Neusner follows the procedures that have guided his prior work in situating Rabbinic documents within their formal context and in ordinal sequence in their larger canonical setting. After introducing the two documents compared here, Abot and ARNA, Neusner sets out a prologue explaining the analytical procedure. Then, he takes up a detailed probe of all the evidence and produces a hypothetical category-system of forms. This is exposed through a system of visual indicators, which Neusner defines and explains in the prologue to Part One. Part Two in two chapters follows. The results of Chapter Forty-Four, where Neusner tests the givens of the documentary hypothesis against the facts of ARNA and Abot, yield the concluding chapter, Chapter Forty-Five, where Neusner surveys the results for the entire document to see what rules govern in the context of the documentary hypothesis. These call into question the universal applicability of that hypothesis. There is no documentary program that derives uniquely from ARNA in canonical context.

DKK 583.00
1

An Anthology of Belizean Literature - - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Persia and Rome in Classical Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Comparative Midrash - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Comparative Midrash - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The documentary hypothesis of the Rabbinic canon of late antiquity maintains that complete documents form the smallest whole building blocks of the Rabbinic system. These two volumes undertake a concrete exercise in the realization of the documentary hypothesis. It compares the rhetorical/formal and exegetical traits of two entire, kindred documents. Then, through a side by side chart, it compares each component of the two documents'' treatment of the same extended segment of Scripture, Numbers 19. Whole documents are to be described and analyzed through a process of systematic description, comparison, and contrast. What makes the study fresh is that the author compares the two documents of the rabbinic canon that are most alike—the two Sifrés on Numbers. What makes it surprising is the result: they have nothing in common. Each is autonomous, and except for the scriptural foundation systematically shared by both, neither intersects in an appreciable measure with the other. Volume One (Chapters One and Two) deals with forms. In Chapter One, the author surveys the forms of Sifré to Numbers and identifies and classifies the formal patterns that govern throughout. Then, with the formal and propositional program of Sifré to Numbers as a base, in Chapter Two he does the same with Sifré Zutta to Numbers. Volume Two (Chapters Three through Five) deals with exegesis and systematic comparison of whole segments of documents. Chapters Three and Four describe and compare the exegetical patterns of the base-documents, with special reference to the utilization of the verses of Scripture as foci of coherent discourse. In Chapter Five, the author compares the treatment of Huqqat, that is, a single passage of Scripture read by the two commentaries respectively.

DKK 406.00
1

Comparative Midrash - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Comparative Midrash - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The documentary hypothesis of the Rabbinic canon of late antiquity maintains that complete documents form the smallest whole building blocks of the Rabbinic system. These two volumes undertake a concrete exercise in the realization of the documentary hypothesis. It compares the rhetorical/formal and exegetical traits of two entire, kindred documents. Then, through a side by side chart, it compares each component of the two documents'' treatment of the same extended segment of Scripture, Numbers 19. Whole documents are to be described and analyzed through a process of systematic description, comparison, and contrast. What makes the study fresh is that the author compares the two documents of the rabbinic canon that are most alike—the two Sifrés on Numbers. What makes it surprising is the result: they have nothing in common. Each is autonomous, and except for the scriptural foundation systematically shared by both, neither intersects in an appreciable measure with the other. Volume One (Chapters One and Two) deals with forms. In Chapter One, the author surveys the forms of Sifré to Numbers and identifies and classifies the formal patterns that govern throughout. Then, with the formal and propositional program of Sifré to Numbers as a base, in Chapter Two he does the same with Sifré Zutta to Numbers. Volume Two (Chapters Three through Five) deals with exegesis and systematic comparison of whole segments of documents. Chapters Three and Four describe and compare the exegetical patterns of the base-documents, with special reference to the utilization of the verses of Scripture as foci of coherent discourse. In Chapter Five, the author compares the treatment of Huqqat, that is, a single passage of Scripture read by the two commentaries respectively.

DKK 459.00
1

The Treasury of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Chapters in the Formative History of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

War and Peace in Rabbinic Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Treasury of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

The Treasury of Judaism - Jacob Neusner - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk

Speaking for Howells - Gregory J. Stratman - Bog - University Press of America - Plusbog.dk