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Web of Life - Folklore and Midrash in Rabbinic Literature (Paperback)
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Web of Life - Folklore and Midrash in Rabbinic Literature (Paperback)
Series: Contraversions: Jews and Other Differences
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"Web of Life" weaves its suggestive interpretation of Jewish
culture in the Palestine of late antiquity on the warp of a
singular, breathtakingly tragic, and sublime rabbinic text,
"Lamentations Rabbah." The textual analyses that form the core of
the book are informed by a range of theoretical paradigms rarely
brought to bear on rabbinic literature: structural analysis of
mythologies and folktales, performative approaches to textual
production, feminist theory, psychoanalytical analysis of culture,
cultural criticism, and folk narrative genre analysis.
The concept of context as the hermeneutic basis for literary
interpretation reactivates the written text and subverts the
hierarchical structures with which it has been traditionally
identified. This book reinterprets rabbinic culture as an arena of
multiple dialogues that traverse traditional concepts of identity
regarding gender, nation, religion, and territory. The author's
approach is permeated by the idea that scholarly writing about
ancient texts is invigorated by an existential hermeneutic rooted
in the universality of human experience. She thus resorts to
personal experience as an idiom of communication between author and
reader and between human beings of our time and of the past. This
research acknowledges the overlap of poetic and analytical language
as well as the language of analysis and everyday life.
In eliciting folk narrative discourses inside the rabbinic text,
the book challenges traditional views about the social basis that
engendered these texts. It suggests the subversive potential of the
constitutive texts of Jewish culture from late antiquity to the
present by pointing out the inherent multi-vocality of the text,
adding to the conventionally acknowledged synagogue and academy the
home, the marketplace, and other private and public socializing
institutions.
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