The debate will continue, and those conducting it will be grateful to Jaffee for his helpful contribution to the presentation of the data and to their scientific examination.
Journal of Jewish Studies
Jaffee is to be commended on covering such a complicated and challenging topic in a clear, intellectually impressive and soundly critical fashion.
Journal of Jewish Studies
The classical Rabbinic tradition (legal, discursive, and exegetical) claims to be the Oral Torah, transmitted by word of mouth in an unbroken chain deriving its authority ultimately from divine revelation to Moses at Sinai. Since the third century CE, however, this tradition has been embodied in written texts. Through judicious deployment and analysis of the evidence, Martin Jaffee is able to show that the Rabbinic tradition, as we have it, developed through a mutual interpretation of oral and written modes. The ideology of the Oral Torah, however - which appeared in its first fully developed form only in the mid-third century CE - was intended to ground talmudic study practices and the authority of the Rabbinic master as the living embodiment of the Torah. Torah, as transformative religious knowledge and praxis, could only be internalized through discipleship to a religious Master within a circle of other disciples; it could not be mastered from a written text which, by itself, was deemed to be religiously inert.
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Through judicious deployment and analysis of the evidence, Martin Jaffee is able to show that the Rabbinic tradition, as we have it, developed through a mutual interpretation of oral and written modes.
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"This book is must reading for anyone interested in rabbinic literature, the history of ancient Judaism, and the role of orality in traditional societies and cultures."-- Religious Studies Review
"The first word that comes to mind in reviewing Torah in the Mouth is elegant. It distills over twenty years of Martin S. Jaffee's innovative research into a single, readable whole, a modest 159 pages for the core text. All scholars or Rabbinic studies will want, and probably need, to read this book; so will many students of Second Temple Jerusalem The insights of this book will probably interest New Testament scholars too, as well as
those concerned with literacy and orality in cultures of discipleship, especially in late antiquity."- The Journal of the American Academy of Religion
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780195140675
Publisert
2001
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
508 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
356
Forfatter