The rabbinic sages of late antiquity are known for their sophisticated and creative reading of Scripture, but rabbinic literature also includes elaborate commentary on the sages' own teachings. The Rise of Talmud argues that the development of this commentary, later called Talmud, transformed the sages' self-perception and intellectual world.
The rabbinic sages of late antiquity are known for their sophisticated and creative reading of Scripture, but rabbinic literature also includes elaborate commentary on the sages' own teachings. The Rise of Talmud argues that the development of this commentary, later called Talmud, transformed the sages' self-perception and intellectual world.
Moulie Vidas is Associate Professor of Religion and Judaic Studies at Princeton University, specializing in Talmudic literature. He is the author of Tradition and the Formation of the Talmud (2014). He was raised in Tel Aviv and now lives in New York.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction I. INDIVIDUATION 1: Who Is Speaking? Identification of Anonymous Teachings 2: The Sages, Opinionated: De'ah and Individual Inclination 3: The Switched Line: Shita and Reading for Consistency 4: Lip-Synching in the Grave: Narratives and Images of Attribution II. IMPERFECTION 5: The Scattered Torah: The Problem of Textual Knowledge 6: Variae Recitationes: Comparison of Divergent Texts 7: It's Not Here: Emendations 8: Needy, Lost, and Kind of Divine: Intertextuality, Necessity, and Recontextualization 9: Conclusion: The More Humane Letters
Introduction I. INDIVIDUATION 1: Who Is Speaking? Identification of Anonymous Teachings 2: The Sages, Opinionated: De'ah and Individual Inclination 3: The Switched Line: Shita and Reading for Consistency 4: Lip-Synching in the Grave: Narratives and Images of Attribution II. IMPERFECTION 5: The Scattered Torah: The Problem of Textual Knowledge 6: Variae Recitationes: Comparison of Divergent Texts 7: It's Not Here: Emendations 8: Needy, Lost, and Kind of Divine: Intertextuality, Necessity, and Recontextualization 9: Conclusion: The More Humane Letters
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