The Stranger in Ancient and Mediaeval Jewish Tradition
Papers Read at the First Meeting of the JBSCE, Piliscsaba, 2009
Jan Dusek editor Géza G Xeravits editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:De Gruyter
Published:17th Feb '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume presents selected papers read at the first meeting of the Society for Jewish and Biblical Studies in Central Europe, in Piliscsaba, Hungary, February 2009, but does not publish the proceedings of this meeting (for a clarification see here). The papers investigate various aspects of the concept “Stranger” in Jewish tradition, from the Hebrew Bible to Mediaeval Jewish thought. The bulk of the material focuses on Early Jewish literature, which mirrors an intensive interaction with the Hellenistic system of thought, and the development of concurring Jewish interpretations of traditional values. The papers of the volume provide insightful case studies about the formation of Jewish identity in diverse periods of Israelite and Jewish history, as well as the different attitudes to strangers, being either outsiders, or belonging to opposing sects of Judaism itself. The reader finds essays of historical, literary, and hermeneutical attention; of interest also to scholars of various forms of ancient and mediaeval Judaism.
ISBN: 9783110222036
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 502g
259 pages