Why Did Paul Go West?: Jewish Historical Narrative and Thought: Jewish and Christian Texts
Autor Professor Doron Mendelsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 mai 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567364692
ISBN-10: 0567364690
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria Jewish and Christian Texts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0567364690
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Seria Jewish and Christian Texts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Provides
insights
into
split
in
Jewish
diaspora,
and
how
this
effected
the
spread
of
Christianity.
Notă biografică
Doron
Mendelsis
Max
and
Sophie
Mydans
Professor
in
the
Humanities
at
the
Department
of
History
at
the
Hebrew
University
of
Jerusalem,
Israel.
His
recent
publications
include:
Identity,
Religion
and
Historiography
and
The
Media
Revolution
of
Early
Christianity.
Cuprins
1.
Why
Did
Paul
Go
West?2.
How
Was
Antiquity
Treated
in
Societies
with
a
Hellenistic
Heritage?
And
Why
Did
the
Rabbis
Avoid
Writing
History?3.
Can
We
Read
a
Historical
Text
as
a
Musical
Score?
A
New
Approach
to
Polyphony
and
Simultaneity
in
1
Maccabees4.
The
Conceptual
Linearity
of
Historical
Narrative
and
Its
Distortion.
A
Preliminary
Note5.
Memory
and
Memories.
The
Attitude
of
1
and
2
Maccabees
toward
Hellenization
and
Hellenism6.
Phases
of
Inscribed
Memory
Concerning
the
Land
of
Israel
in
Palestinian
Judaism
of
the
Second
Century
BCE.
The
Case
of
1
Maccabees7.
Etiquette
I:
Was
the
Rejection
of
Gifts
One
of
the
Reasons
for
the
Outbreak
of
the
Maccabean
Revolt?
A
Preliminary
Note
on
the
Role
of
Gifting
in
the
Book
of
1
Maccabees8.
Etiquette
II:
Honor
and
Humiliation
as
a
Factor
in
Hasmonean
Politics
According
to
the
Narrator
of
1
Maccabees9.
Political
Theology
I:
Deus
Duplex
to
Deus
Silens.
The
State
of
Exception
in
the
Political
Theology
of
1
Maccabees10.
Political
Theology
II:
1
Maccabees
and
Liberation
from
a
Competing
King-God
and
the
Phenomenon
of
Rifts
Inherent
in
Ancient
IsraelSelected
Bibliography
Recenzii
Doron
Mendels
is
one
of
our
finest
historians
of
Judaism
in
the
Hellenistic
age.
In
the
series
of
essays
that
make
up
this
splendid
volume,
he
offers
numerous
fresh
insights
into
early
Jewish
historiography.
The
essays
are
notable
for
their
combination
of
theoretical
sophistication
and
careful
textual
analysis.
The
series
of
studies
on
the
political
theology
and
rhetorical
strategies
of
1
Maccabees
are
especially
welcome
and
whet
one's
appetite
for
Mendels'
forthcoming
commentary
on
this
vitally
important
book.
While Professor Doron Mendels' bookWhy did Paul go West?focuses on the Hellenistic period, its great interest lies not only in its investigation of the ancient world, but above all in the way in which this investigation is made fruitful for an understanding of current historical and political realities. Indeed, the originality of its contribution is found both in what Doron Mendels terms a "polyphonic reading" of I Maccabees, revealing Hellenistic practices of remembering and reconfiguring (at times subverting) the past, and also in its groundbreaking examination of the deeper implications of this biblical text for an understanding of the modern conception of "political theology." Professor Mendels brilliantly demonstrates how the Hellenistic context of Jewish history, in which God and the prophets no longer seemed to guide the people, clearly foreshadows what 20th century political theory has termed a political "state of exception", thus raising the problem of sovereignty in a way that has lost nothing of its significance for our contemporary world.
Professor Mendels - a prolific scholar of early Judaism and perceptive contributor with new theoretical insights on ancient history - provocatively challenges the Judaism-Hellenism dualism. In recent decades it has been intellectual fashion to deconstruct the time-honoured Judaism-Hellenism dichotomy and to assert that all forms of early Judaism simultaneously were part and parcel of Hellenism. Mendels dissolves the absolute nature of the argument by highlighting the vast differences in terms of Hellenistic influence that existed between various forms of Judaism in the Western and Eastern part of the Roman Empire. The discussion is brought considerably further by nuanced reinstallation of former scholarship's dualism.
The volume by Doron Mendels brings together ten separate yet interconnected essays that examine Jewish narratives ... and thought, centering around the themes of Jewish identity, the role of memory, historiography, gift giving and its relation to honor, and political theology.
Summarized.
While Professor Doron Mendels' bookWhy did Paul go West?focuses on the Hellenistic period, its great interest lies not only in its investigation of the ancient world, but above all in the way in which this investigation is made fruitful for an understanding of current historical and political realities. Indeed, the originality of its contribution is found both in what Doron Mendels terms a "polyphonic reading" of I Maccabees, revealing Hellenistic practices of remembering and reconfiguring (at times subverting) the past, and also in its groundbreaking examination of the deeper implications of this biblical text for an understanding of the modern conception of "political theology." Professor Mendels brilliantly demonstrates how the Hellenistic context of Jewish history, in which God and the prophets no longer seemed to guide the people, clearly foreshadows what 20th century political theory has termed a political "state of exception", thus raising the problem of sovereignty in a way that has lost nothing of its significance for our contemporary world.
Professor Mendels - a prolific scholar of early Judaism and perceptive contributor with new theoretical insights on ancient history - provocatively challenges the Judaism-Hellenism dualism. In recent decades it has been intellectual fashion to deconstruct the time-honoured Judaism-Hellenism dichotomy and to assert that all forms of early Judaism simultaneously were part and parcel of Hellenism. Mendels dissolves the absolute nature of the argument by highlighting the vast differences in terms of Hellenistic influence that existed between various forms of Judaism in the Western and Eastern part of the Roman Empire. The discussion is brought considerably further by nuanced reinstallation of former scholarship's dualism.
The volume by Doron Mendels brings together ten separate yet interconnected essays that examine Jewish narratives ... and thought, centering around the themes of Jewish identity, the role of memory, historiography, gift giving and its relation to honor, and political theology.
Summarized.