Set in Stone
America's Embrace of the Ten Commandments
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:8th Jun '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£21.49(9780190088415)
The Ten Commandments need no introduction. In fact, we probably think we know all there is to know about these divine dos and don'ts. But as this imaginative and vivid account reveals, there is a lot more to this ancient biblical code than Moses and Mount Sinai. Situating the Ten Commandments within the context of modern America, prominent historian and engaging story-teller Jenna Weissman Joselit takes the reader from Indian burial mounds in 19th-century Ohio to the sand dunes of 1920s California and into the civic squares of the 1950s to reveal the centrality of the Ten Commandments to the nation's identity. Rich in incident and story and inhabited by a lively cast of characters whose ranks include forgers and filmmakers, architects and archaeologists, ordinary citizens and politicians, this book compels us to take another look at the Ten Commandments and see them afresh. Through a series of deftly-rendered vignettes, this compelling account recasts the cultural impact of the Ten Commandments in American society not as a legal code or theological imperative, but as a physical, material, and visual phenomenon. We come away with the understanding that they are not cast in stone but a fertile repository of American history.
Joselit's style and prose are accessible and engaging, especially for popular audiences and undergraduate classrooms ... [this book is] notable for bridging the wide gap between academic and general audiences, and it is exemplary in its attempt to tell a series of "tautly told tales" in which physical manifestations of the Ten Commandments provoked immense discussion and controversy. * Katherine Rosenblatt, American Jewish Archives Journal *
Joselit's expertise in history, Jewish studies, and material culture shines in this accessible text, which will be a valuable resource for students of religious studies, American studies, and history...Highly recommended. * E.S. Clark, CHOICE *
Set in Stone is a fascinating tour of forgotten moments in American religious history. Through lively writing and illuminating research, Jenna Weissman Joselit has unearthed the astonishing story of the many times Americans have rediscovered the Ten Commandments and made them their own. With fights over public monuments to these biblical rules still making news, it's never been more important to understand where the nation's volatile religious symbols came from, and what's at stake in our disagreements over where they belong. * Peter Manseau, Curator of Religion, National Museum of American History *
In this beautifully researched book, historian Jenna Weissman Joselit celebrates the presence and significance of the Ten Commandments in the American experience. She offers a fascinating tour of the delightful variety of ways in which that ancient code is woven into the ordinary fabric of American life and how its meaning has informed the deepest expressions of the American creed. Surely a 'Thou Shalt Read.' * Charles Krauthammer *
The Ten Commandments have been deeply chiseled into the American religious imagination. With vibrant prose and wry observation, Jenna Weissman Joselit explores the nation's long-running captivation with the Decalogue - in everything from archaeological relics to Hollywood spectacles to municipal monuments to self-help regimens to synagogue renderings. Set in Stone is a materially rich history of a canonical cultural preoccupation. * Leigh Eric Schmidt, Edward C. Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities, Washington University in St. Louis *
The Ten Commandments - do you know them? Are you sure? Many Americans have been finding them, recasting them, and enshrining them in amazing and dubious ways for over 200 years. With a scholarly dispatch heightened by dry wit, Jenna Weissman Joselit's Set in Stone explores America's long-standing Ten Commandment obsession, from 1860 archaeological 'discoveries' (dubious) to Cecil B. DeMille's two blockbuster Ten Commandment movies (dubious and wildly successful)an incisive, insightful, and wonderfully informative book about America's surprising passion for ancient religious texts. * Jon Butler, author of New World Faiths: Religion in Colonial America *
A brilliant reading of a durable icon, the Ten Commandments, in word and substance. There are many a surprising twist and turn in this imaginatively researched study of a ubiquitous object of material religion, whether in synagogues and churches, comic books and movies, at the Passover table, or in courts of law. The writing sparkles with wit and insight, a delight to read. Set in Stone is simply exemplary in every regard. * Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, author of Destination Culture: Tourism, Museums, and Heritage *
Joselit writes in a refreshingly casual and breezy style...[T]he book is what it promises: a fun and thoughtful exploration of one of the most important and enduring religious symbols in the United States. * Matthew Avery Sutton, Journal of the American Academy of Religion *
ISBN: 9780190253196
Dimensions: 147mm x 216mm x 23mm
Weight: 363g
232 pages