Hekhalot Literature in Context (Leinen)

Hekhalot Literature in Context

Between Byzantium and Babylonia, Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 153

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Bibliographische Informationen
ISBN/EAN: 9783161525759
Sprache: Englisch
Seiten: XXIV, 439 S.
Fomat (h/b/t): 3.2 x 23.7 x 16.4 cm
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2013
Bindung: Leinen

Beschreibung

Over the past 30 years, scholars of early Jewish mysticism have, with increasing confidence, located the initial formation of Hekhalot literature in Byzantine Palestine and Sasanian or early Islamic Babylonia (ca. 500-900 C.E.), rather than at the time of the Mishnah, Tosefta, early Midrashim, or Palestinian Talmud (ca. 100-400 C.E.). This advance has primarily been achieved through major gains in our understanding of the dynamic and highly flexible processes of composition, redaction, and transmission that produced the Hekhalot texts as we know them today. These gains have been coupled with greater appreciation of the complex relationships between Hekhalot writings and the variegated Jewish literary culture of late antiquity, both within and beyond the boundaries of the rabbinic movement. Yet important questions remain regarding the specific cultural contexts and institutional settings out of which the various strands of Hekhalot literature emerged as well as the multiple trajectories of use and appropriation they subsequently travelled. In the present volume, an international team of experts explores-from a variety of disciplinary perspectives (e.g. linguistics, ritual and gender studies, intellectual history)-the literary formation, cultural meanings, religious functions, and textual transmission of Hekhalot literature.

Autorenportrait

Born 1971; 2004 PhD from Princeton University; 2004-06 Assistant Professor of Early Judaism at the University of Minnesota; 2006-10 Assistant Professor of Ancient and Jewish History at the University of California, Los Angeles; 2010-17 Associate Professor of Ancient and Jewish History at the University of California, Los Angeles; 2009-12 Director at the Center for the Study of Religion; since 2017 Research Scholar in the Program for Judaic Studies at Princeton University.