Purity and Identity in Ancient Judaism

INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780253067715

From the Temple to the Mishnah

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By Yair Furstenberg, Translated by Sara Tova Brody
Imprint:
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
520 g
Pages:
286

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Description

Yair Furstenberg is Associate Professor of Talmud at Hebrew University, where he serves as chair of the department. Among his publications are Jewish Martyrdom in Antiquity: From the Books of Maccabees to the Babylonian Talmud and the edited volume Jewish and Christian Communal Identities in the Roman World.

Preface Note on Translations and Editions List of Abbreviations Introduction: From Pharisees to Rabbis Part One: The Varieties of Purity 1. Biblical Foundations, New Conception 2. Exclusive Paths to Purity from Qumran to Jesus Part Two: Communal Identities 3. The Purity of the Pharisees 4. Outsider Impurity and the Forms of Judean Sectarianism 5. Inclusion and Marginalization Part Three: Tradition and Invention 6. Changing Social Contexts 7. The End of Purity Epilogue: The Rabbinic Movement within Shifting Religious Cultures Notes Bibliography Index

"In a masterful, erudite, and lucidly written study, Yair Furstenberg explores the development of perceptions and practices of ritual purity from the Second Temple Period to the Rabbinic era as prisms through which fundamental issues of identity and community were negotiated during this tumultuous time. The book expertly and convincingly demonstrates the value of careful textual inquiry for the construction of a social history, as it uncovers the multiple and rich layers of ideas, concerns, and cultural and religious challenges that are hidden in one of the most fascinating sets of texts from Jewish antiquity."-Mira Balberg, author of Purity, Body, and Self in Early Rabbinic Literature "This book is not for the faint- hearted. The heart of the book are rich discussions of halachah found in the Dead Sea Scrolls and tannaitic literature. The author's erudition will interest scholars of Second Temple purity, but it is unlikely to fundamentally change the way we use Rabbinic halachic literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls, at least for this reader. To his credit, Furstenberg reminds us that Jews of antiquity differ from Jews of today, especially in how they lived their Judaism. Issues of purity and impurity pervasively occupied Second Temple Jews and are essential to understanding this period."-Rabbi Matthew A. Kraus, CCAR Journal: The Reform Jewish Quarterly

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