This volume presents the major works of classical rabbinic Judaism as inter-related aggregates analyzed through three central themes. Part 1, âIntertextuality,â investigates the multi-directional relationships among and between rabbinic texts and nonrabbinic Jewish sources. Part 2, âEast and Westâ explores the impact on rabbinic texts of the cultures of the Hellenistic, Roman, and Christian West and the Sasanian East. Part 3, âHalakha and Aggada,â interrogates the relationship of law and narrative in rabbinic sources. This bold volume uncovers alliances and ruptures -- textual, cultural, and generic -- obscured by document-based approaches to rabbinic literature.
"This important book presents a series of new introductions to rabbinic literature." Ishay Rosen-Zvi, Tel Aviv University, BMCR 2024.10.05.
Christine Hayes, Ph.D., (1993), UC Berkeley, is Sterling Professor of Religious Studies in Classical Judaica at Yale University. She has published articles and monographs in talmudic-midrashic studies, including Gentile Impurities and Jewish Identities (Oxford, 2002) and What's Divine about Divine Law? Early Perspectives (Princeton University Press, 2015), as well as edited volumes including The Cambridge Companion to Judaism and Law (Cambridge, 2017).
Foreword CRINT Foundation Notes on Contributors
Setting the Stage
Introduction
âChristine Hayes
1 The Rabbis of History and Historiography
âHayim Lapin
2 Tradition, Scripture, Law, and Authority
âTzvi Novick
Part 1: Intertextuality
3 Intertextuality and Tannaic Literature: A History
âChristine Hayes
4 Intertextuality and Amoraic Literature
âAlyssa M. Gray
5 Second Temple Literature and the Rabbinic Library
âMeir Ben Shahar, Tal Ilan, and Vered Noam
Part 2: East and West
6 The Greco-Roman West and Rabbinic Literature in Palestine and Babylonia
âRichard Hidary
7 The Impact of âPaganâ Rome
âKatell Berthelot
8 From West to East: Christian Traditions and the Babylonian Talmud
âMichal Bar-Asher Siegal
9 The Sasanian East and the Babylonian Talmud
âYishai Kiel
Part 3: Halakha and Aggada
10 Halakha and Aggada in Tannaic Sources
âSteven D. Fraade and Moshe Simon-Shoshan
11 Halakha and Aggada in Post-Tannaic Literature
âJeffrey L. Rubenstein, Yonatan Feintuch, and Jane L. Kanarek
12 Resources for the Critical Study of Rabbinic Literature in the Twenty-First Century
âShai Secunda
Index of Primary Sources Index of Modern Authors Subject Index
The volume serves simultaneously as (1) an introduction to classical rabbinic literature (to the 7th century CE); (2) an introduction to the scholarship on classical rabbinic literature; (3) a bold revisioning of the field. It will become a standard reference for students and scholars of the field because of its sweeping overview of the history of scholarship and contemporary trends and methods in the study of rabbinic literature, and its orientation to and analysis of the major works of the rabbinic corpus.
It will be of interest to university and college libraries, specialists, and post-graduate students in the following fields: Ancient Judaism; Rabbinics (including Talmudic and midrashic studies); Jewish law; The study of Late Antiquity.