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Jewish History and Jewish Memory: Essays in Honor of Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi

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The publication of Yosef Yerushalmi's Zakhor in 1982 set the agenda for a generation of scholarly inquiry into historical images and myths, the construction of the Jewish past, and the making and meaning of collective memory. In this book, eminent scholars in their respectives fields, whose foci span medieval to present-day Jewish history and thought, extend the lines of his seminal study into topics that range from medieval rabbinics, homiletics, kabbalah and Hasidism to anti-semitism, Zionism and the making of modern Jewish identity. The essays are clustered around four central historical consciousness and the construction of memory in medieval and early modern texts; the relationship between time and history in key areas of premodern Jewish thought; the modern age and the demise of traditional forms of collective memory; and the writing of Jewish history in modern times. The result, the editors write, is a panoramic view that "celebrates Yerushalmi's catholicity of knowledge" and "unerring instinct to identify historical links not always visible to the eye" at the same time it maps the "contours of history and memory in a religious and cultural tradition in which remembrance was a deeply ingrained, ritualized imperative."

480 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 1998

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Elisheva Carlebach

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