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Modern Jewish Mythologies (Hardcover)
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Modern Jewish Mythologies (Hardcover)
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Based on the Mason Lectures delivered at the Oxford Centre for
Hebrew and Jewish Studies in the winter of 1995, the ten essays in
this volume demonstrate the function and dynamic effect Jewish
mythologies in social, political, and psychological life.
Eli Yassif's introduction illustrates the complex relationship
between myth and ritual in modern Jewish culture. In a separate
essay, he focuses on the ancient Jewish tale of the Golem, a myth
that presents an exemplary test case for the exploration of
cultural continuity. Using the testimonies of Jewish immigrants
from eastern Europe to Britain and the battle on the plain of
Latrun in the Israeli War of Independence, David Cesarani and Anita
Shapira demonstrate that the process of creating myth is related in
one way or another to attempts by specific social and ethnic groups
to shape their collective memory. Along these lines, Milton Shain
and Sally Frankental interrogate the view that during the apartheid
period in South African history, South African Jewry operated on a
higher moral plane than most other white South Africans. And while
Nurith Gertz examines the male superhero that dominated the early
national Zionist cinema and reflected the center of gravity in the
Zionist myth, Dan Urian analyzes two Israeli plays produced in the
1990s that examine the myth of the biblical Sarah, rewritten from a
feminist perspective.
Other essays examine widely held cultural beliefs of contemporary
Western Jewry. Jonathan Webber questions whether memory is an
essentially Jewish value and remembrance a Jewish moral duty. Tudor
Parfitt explores Western and Israeli perceptions of the Yemenite
Jews, and Sylvie Anne Goldberg, in examining the evolving role of
the "chevrah kaddisha" in Prague, discusses changes in perceptions
of communal institutions and traditional and modern Jewish
attitudes with regard to death. Finally, Matthew Olshan offers an
analysis of Kafka's animal fables as parables for the Jewish
response to tradition.
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