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Shaking the Pillars of Exile: 'Voice of a Fool, ' an Early Modern Jewish Critique of Rabbinic Culture
Contributor(s): Fishman, Talya (Author)
ISBN: 0804728208     ISBN-13: 9780804728201
Publisher: Stanford University Press
OUR PRICE:   $85.50  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: September 1997
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Judaism - History
- Religion | Judaism - Rituals & Practice
- Religion | Judaism - General
Dewey: 296.090
LCCN: 96043155
Series: Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture
Physical Information: 384 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This book explores a heretical blueprint for Jewish modernization written by a Venetian rabbi (under cover of pseudonym) in the early seventeenth century, almost two centuries before political emancipation. The analysis of this text, Kol Sakhal (Voice of a Fool), highlights the ways in which it harnessed concepts and methods drawn from the texts of rabbinic Judaism itself in order to reform Jewish culture from within. This book thus challenges the assumption that pre-modern Jewish society was culturally monolithic and unquestioningly obedient to rabbinic authority. In so doing, it raises fresh and unsettling questions about the periodization of Jewish history. Like the contemporaneous political and religious struggle that the Republic of Venice was waging against papal Rome, this remarkable Jewish attack on rabbinic authority targets--and revises--both the traditional historiography of sacred institutions and the legal canon itself. The text's very iconoclasm is shown to derive from the corpus of rabbinic Judaism, for the preservation of certain strains of inquiry in traditional sources makes them a virtual repository of tolerated dissent. Conjecture about the possible influence that a recently discovered work by a heretical Iberian Jewish convert to Catholicism may have had on the composition of Voice of a Fool leads to a discussion of the types of heterodoxy that threatened rabbinic Jewish communities in Italy and elsewhere in the early modern period. Reflections on the significance of the mask adopted by the text's author and on his (false) claim that the work was composed in 1500 in Spain facilitate speculation about his motives in trying to reinvent history. The second half of the book presents the first annotated English translation of Voice of a Fool. Three appendixes analyze evidence concerning the date and place of the text's composition, the identification of its author, and its various manuscripts.