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The Closed Book

How the Rabbis Taught the Jews (Not) to Read the Bible

Rebecca Scharbach Wollenberg

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Religion/Theologie

Beschreibung

A groundbreaking reinterpretation of early Judaism, during the millennium before the study of the Bible took center stage

Early Judaism is often described as the religion of the book par excellence—a movement built around the study of the Bible and steeped in a culture of sacred bookishness that evolved from an unrelenting focus on a canonical text. But in The Closed Book, Rebecca Scharbach Wollenberg argues that Jews didn’t truly embrace the biblical text until nearly a thousand years after the Bible was first canonized. She tells the story of the intervening centuries during which even rabbis seldom opened a Bible and many rabbinic authorities remained deeply ambivalent about the biblical text as a source of sacred knowledge.

Wollenberg shows that, in place of the biblical text, early Jewish thinkers embraced a form of biblical revelation that has now largely disappeared from practice. Somewhere between the fixed transcripts of the biblical Written Torah and the fluid traditions of the rabbinic Oral Torah, a third category of revelation was imagined by these rabbinic thinkers. In this “third Torah,” memorized spoken formulas of the biblical tradition came to be envisioned as a distinct version of the biblical revelation. And it was believed that this living tradition of recitation passed down by human mouths, unbound by the limitations of written text, provided a fuller and more authentic witness to the scriptural revelation at Sinai. In this way, early rabbinic authorities were able to leverage the idea of biblical revelation while quarantining the biblical text itself from communal life.

The result is a revealing reinterpretation of “the people of the book” before they became people of the book.

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Textuality, North Africa, Oral Torah, Parchment, Sacred, Literacy, Torah, Sequence, Heresy, Mental mapping, Allegory, Abridgement, Hebrew Bible, Humiliation, Acculturation, Human body, Rhetoric, Oxford University Press, Oral tradition, Statistical hypothesis testing, Technology, Creation myth, Jewish studies, Late Antiquity, Rabbinic Judaism, Single parent, Quintilian, Writing, Targum, Craig A. Evans, Midrash, Variable (mathematics), V., Calculation, Literary language, Editing, Rashi, Explanation, Adult, Ancient Judaism (book), Wealth, Exegesis, Canon law, Mishnah, Books of the Bible, Reliquary, East Asian studies, Clothing, Religious text, Human mouth, Haninah, Monotheism, Phylogenetic tree, Solomon Schechter, Bible, Biblical manuscript, Rabbinic literature, Embarrassment, Jews, Animalism (philosophy), Sikh practices, Hebrew language, Literature, Semantics, Muslim, Qere and Ketiv, Shammai, Diaeresis (diacritic), Epigraphy, Classical Athens