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David Biale is the Emmanuel Ringelblum Professor of Jewish History at the University of California, Davis. He lives in Berkeley, California.

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The Norton Anthology of World Religions vol. I & II (2014) — Editor — 116 exemplars

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Gershom Scholem, was a German-born Israeli philosopher and historian. He is widely regarded as the founder of the modern, academic study of Kabbalah, which is Jewish mysticism. He was the first professor of Jewish Mysticism at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Scholem immigrated to Israel before World War II started to pursue Jewish studies. He was also very moody and had difficulty with relationships including his closest friends Hannah Arendt and Walter Benjamin. He was a prolific writer, developed religious study programs, and saved Jewish texts from destruction after the war. This book is part of a series published by Yale University Press, and makes me want to read some of Scholmen's books on Kabbalah.… (més)
 
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kerryp | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Dec 7, 2020 |
This book strength is also it's weakness: it is a collection of disparate essays from various authors, not a coherent presentation of Jewish history. On the one hand that provides an opportunity to present multiple viewpoints that one author or a strongly edited book wouldn't. On the other hand there are huge gaps in the story (nothing on Alexandrian Jewry for which we have written contemporaneous sources - Philo anyone?), annoying inconsistencies in terminology and vast differences in quality, depth and interest between chapter to chapter.

So one of the worst chapters is that on the Biblical period - it's more a hermeneutic interpretation of the bible rather than a cultural history of the period based on archeological evidence. You won't find any judgement here on the historical veracity of the Bible. The last chapter on Arabian Jewry is equally mediocre although from almost the opposite extreme: it takes Quranic & Hadith accounts of early Islam & Arabia almost as canonical history & tries to understand Arabian Jewry based on that (false) assumption. Having read Tom Holland's amazing book on this period, I can't take that chapter too seriously.

The best chapters were the ones on the Second Temple, Roman rule, and Babylonian Jewry. Lots of interesting insights and new ideas.

While understanding the structure, is it too much to ask that Biale do some editing to ensure consistency of terminology - like the anachronistic use of the name Palestine to describe the area can drive you crazy - why would a historian not use contemporaneous names? Plus the fact that the introduction and conclusion are from the one volume edition with nothing specific to each subdivision makes you wonder besides finding the authors, and writing a few pages, what does it mean that Biale was the editor?

The book also assumes that you know quite a bit of both the history of the Jews and of Judaism. While this project was originally intended to be a definitive and modern history of Judaism for an educated audience of non- scholars, that book stills need to be written. The closest and best (although it's outdated and sadly out of print) that comes close is Daniel Jeremy Silver's History of Judaism.

After a break I'll move on to Volume 2. Hopefully with more sources, the quality will improve.

PS my comment below is really an earlier and less well edited version of this review.I clicked on wrong thingee and it didn't a comment instead of a review. So yes, you can skip it.
… (més)
 
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aront | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Jul 25, 2017 |
I likes watching the rise and fall of civilizations and its effect on the history of the Jewish people as we rolled through the Middle Ages on into early modern times. Parts of it were interesting but a good part of the book didn't grab me. I did think the chapter called Childbirth and Magic was spell bounding. On to Volume III.
 
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SteveRambach | Jan 12, 2011 |
"The question of Jewish national identity- the attempt to fathom the entangled relations between Israel ad God, between Israel and other nations-- is one of the most resonant and unresolvable questions in the Bible." What is the demarcation between the chosen and non chosen? Why doesn't dispersion and exile lead to clear cut borders between cultures? David Biale's scholars takes us through the birth of Ancient Israel, Israel among nations, Hellenistic Judiasm, Greco-Roman Palestine, The Christian Empire, Babylonian, and the rise of Islam. The insights are breath taking. It is not an easy book to read. Next up for me is Volume II.… (més)
 
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SteveRambach | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Dec 28, 2010 |

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Obres
18
També de
1
Membres
718
Popularitat
#35,342
Valoració
½ 3.4
Ressenyes
5
ISBN
48
Llengües
3

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