From Metaphysics to Midrash: Myth, History, and the Interpretation of Scripture in Lurianic KabbalaIndiana University Press, 09/07/2008 - 368 من الصفحات In From Metaphysics to Midrash, Shaul Magid explores the exegetical tradition of Isaac Luria and his followers within the historical context in 16th-century Safed, a unique community that brought practitioners of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam into close contact with one another. Luria's scripture became a theater in which kabbalists redrew boundaries of difference in areas of ethnicity, gender, and the human relation to the divine. Magid investigates how cultural influences altered scriptural exegesis of Lurianic Kabbala in its philosophical, hermeneutical, and historical perspectives. He suggests that Luria and his followers were far from cloistered. They used their considerable skills to weigh in on important matters of the day, offering, at times, some surprising solutions to perennial theological problems. |
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... doctrine of religion (separating Jew and gentile) and gender (separating, by essentializing, the masculine from the feminine). The hermeneutical perspective reads Lurianic Kabbala simultane- ously as exegesis 4 From Metaphysics to Midrash.
... gender , ( 4 ) Gentile prophecy ( that is , the status of Gentile religion as a prophetic tradition ) , and ( 5 ) incarnation , tra- versing the ostensibly opaque barrier separating the human and the di- vine . In each of these cases ...
... gender construction as viewed through the lens of male homosexuality . If , as Luria suggests , gender is not solely biologically deter- mined because males can contain female souls and vice versa , what impact does this have on the gender ...
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المحتوى
1 | |
16 | |
1 Genesis | 34 |
2 Exodus | 75 |
3 Leviticus | 111 |
4 Numbers | 143 |
5 Deuteronomy | 196 |
Conclusion | 222 |
Notes | 229 |
Bibliography | 321 |
Index | 347 |
back cover | 355 |