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In this moving and engaging book by one of France’s few female
rabbis and leader of the country’s Liberal Jewish Movement,
Delphine Horvilleur recounts eleven stories of loss, mourning, and
consolation, collected during years spent caring for the dying and
their loved ones. From Charlie Hebdo columnist Elsa Cayat, to
Simone Veil and Marceline Loridan, “the girls of Birkenau”;
from Yitzhak Rabin, to Myriam, a New Yorker obsessed with planning
her own funeral, to the author friend’s Ariane and her struggle
with terminal illness, Horvilleur writes about death with
intelligence, humour, and compassion. Rejecting the contemporary
tendency to banish death from our thoughts, she encourages us to
embrace its presence as a fundamental part of life. Drawing
from the Jewish tradition, Living with Our Dead is a profoundly
humanist, universal, and hopeful book that celebrates life, love,
memory and the power of storytelling to inspire and sustain us.
Does modernity trample on tradition, or can it in fact be a vehicle
for the sacred? How can one determine whether an interpretation is
legitimate, anachronistic or corrupted? Does sexual obsession have
a textual origin, and is it woman's destiny to be veiled? In Eve's
Attire confronts these questions and more to suggest another
interpretation of religious traditions surrounding the female body
and the erotic. As current fundamentalist religious discourse
expresses a growing fixation on modesty, women are increasingly
reduced to those parts of their bodies that arouse desire,
effectively "genitalised" until the totality of their bodies
becomes taboo. In resistance to such interpretations of religious
text, which see even a woman's voice as an erotic organ to be
silenced, Rabbi Delphine Horvilleur looks not only at religious
texts themselves, but also at their interpreters, as she unpicks
readings that make the woman a temptress, and modesty the
instrument of her oppression. She shows us how nakedness, as
expressed by Adam, Eve or Noah, refers to a culture of desire and
not a wish to suppress it and explores how the veil was originally
intended: not to reject, but to approach the other. Through her
analysis of the meaning of modesty and nudity in Judaism, Delphine
Horvilleur explores the societal and religious obsession with the
female body and its representation and asks questions about how we
can engage more critically with interpretations of sacred texts.
Translated from the French by Ruth Diver
"Anti-Semitism revisited in a wholly original way" Philippe Sands
"Rippling with ideas on every page" Jewish Chronicle "Tackles the
issue [of anti-semitism] from the perspective of a country where
its manifestations have been more vicious and deadly" Financial
Times Rabbi Delphine Horvilleur analyses the phenomenon of
anti-semitism as it is viewed by those who endure it and who,
through narration and literature, succeed in overcoming it. Jewish
texts are replete with treatments of anti-semitism, of this
endlessly paradoxical hatred, and of the ways in which Jews are
perceived by others. But here, the focus is inverted: Anti-Semitism
Revisited explores the hatred of Jews as seen through the lens of
the sacred texts, rabbinical tradition and Jewish lore. Delphine
Horvilleur gives a voice to those who are too often deprived of
one, examining resilience in the face of adversity and the legacy
of an ancient hatred that is often misunderstood. An engaging,
hopeful and very original examination of anti-semitism: what it
means, where it comes from, what are the ancient myths and tropes
that are weaponised against Jewish people, and how do we take them
apart. Translated from the French by David Bellos
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