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Jewish Culture in Early Modern Europe: Essays in Honor of David B. Ruderman

✍ Scribed by Richard I. Cohen (editor), Natalie B. Dohrmann (editor), Adam Shear (editor), Elchanan Reiner (editor)


Publisher
Hebrew Union College Press
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
407
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


In the last two decades, Jewish historians worldwide have developed and refined the discussion of an “early modern” period in Jewish culture, spanning roughly three centuries from 1500 to 1800, and have increasingly found this periodization to be a useful heuristic for interpreting historical developments.

    Thirty-one leading scholars both within and beyond Jewish studies advance, refine, and challenge how we understand the Jewish early modern period. The collection includes a comprehensive range of topics, beginning by examining authority structures of Jewish communities following the expulsions and migrations that reshaped the geographical contours of the Jewish world. The formation of Jewish communities, communal autonomy, and cultural representations of leadership are explored, pointing to a geographical remapping of a Jewish early modernity that can contribute to a better understanding of the integrated economic and cultural landscape of the time. The volume then moves to consider Jewish intellectual life in light of demographic, political, and technological change―especially the advent of print culture. From there, the discussion moves to cultural and intellectual interchange, especially between Jews and Christians, and next, to eighteenth-century Jewish culture as a fulcrum of the early and late modernity. Finally, the book concludes by tracing the early modern as it is both etched into and effaced from later eras, reflecting on the project of historiography as both retelling the past and connecting to the past in the present.

    Read individually, the essays in this volume are finely detailed case studies that illuminate specific aspects of Jewish culture. Read as a mosaic, the studies combine to form a rich and nuanced portrait of a culture that is both a contributor to and a product of early modern Europe and the Ottoman Empire.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents
Ack nowledgments
Introduction
Part I Realms of Authority
Continuity or Change
Don’t Mess with Messer Leon
Jews and Habsburgs in Prague and Regensburg
Jewish Women in the Wake of the Chmielnick i Uprising
For God and Country
“A Civil Death”
PART II Knowledge Networks
The Hebrew Bible and the Senses in Late Medieval Spain
Printing Kabbalah in Sixteenth-Century Italy
Persecution and the Art of Printing
Kabbalah and the Diagramm atic Phase of the Sc ientific Revolution
Yosef Shlomo Delmedigo’s Engagement with Atomism
PART IiI “Jews” and “Judaism” in the Early Modern European Im agination
The Theater of Creation and Re-creation
Weeping over Erasmus in Hebrew and Latin
“Fair Measures from Our Region”
Christian Hebraism and the Rediscovery of Hellenistic Judaism
Jews, Nobility, and Usury in Luther’s Europe
“Adopt This Person So Totally Born Again”
The Conservative Hybridity of Miguel de Barrios
PART IV The Long Eighteenth Century in an Early Modern Key
The Collapse of Jacob’s Ladders?
A Jew from the East Meets Books from the West
Printing, Fundraising, and Jewish Patronage in Eighteenth-Century Livorno
An Interpretive Tradition
Gibbon’s Jews
The “Happy Time” of Moses Mendelssohn and the Transformative Year 1782
A Tale of Three Generations
An Underclass in Jewish History?
PART V From the Early Modern to the Late Modern (and Back Again)
Did North Am erican Jewry Have an Early Modern Period?
Language and Periodization
The End or the Beginning
Between Yitzhak Baer and Claudio Sánchez Albornoz
David B. Ruderman’s Publications


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