The sinner and the amnesiac
the rabbinic invention of Elisha ben Abuya and Eleazar ben Arach
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Author
Publication
2000 - Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA, California
Language
English
Word Count
104,000 words, Guess
Page Count
416 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL17004154M
- ISBN-100804738872
- OCLC Control Number43318979
- OCLC Control Number43474763
- OCLC Control Numbernlsiu.320.9.bad.16047
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number00022858
- LibraryThing5614480
- Goodreads6483271
Classifications
- LCCBM501.2.E45 G67 2000
Description
"This book systematically analyzes all sources referring to Elisha ben Abuya, and in so doing, confronts the difficulties of deriving reliable information from rabbinic materials and of writing the biography of a rabbinic hero. The author argues that we have no way of discovering the historical Elisha ben Ahuya; he is the product of the creative handling of traditions by later generations. Later generations do not fancifully invent the figure of Elisha but interpret and transmit earlier traditions, trying to resolve the contradictions and to interpret the enigmas they encounter. In the context of this interpretive process a unique historical image is created, a sage who is born out of tradition, not historical memory.". "The book also studies Rabbi Eleazar ben Arach. Here, too, the image of the sage does not stem from a historical memory of the sage but from an ideological function which the image of the sage fulfills. Eleazar has come down to us as one who forgot his Torah. Thus, both the sage who is said to have become the greatest of rabbinic sinners and the sage who is said to have forgotten his Torah are products of the literary creativity of rabbinic storytellers who convey a particular ideology through the image of the rabbinic heroes they portray."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Topics
People
Genres
- Biography
Series Statement
- Contraversions
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