Description
Book SynopsisExplores Ottoman Sephardic culture through a study of rabbinic texts written in Ladino, the vernacular language of the Ottoman Jews. This book covers the modernization of Sephardic Jewry in the Eastern Mediterranean in the 19th century. It offers readings of works that examine issues such as social inequality, gender, and secularization.
Trade ReviewScholars of the late Ottoman Empire and the modern Middle East more generally will undoubtedly find within this work a number of striking parallels between the responses of other individuals and groups to the growing Western influence in the region and those of the vernacular rabbis portrayed in Lehmann's study. The unexpected consequences precipitated by these rabbis' attempts to preserve their religious universe in the face of change similarly offer fruitful points of comparison. Ladino Rabbinic Literature and Ottoman Sephardic Culture will therefore also be welcomed by scholars interested in broader debates about the role religion played in the emergence of modernity and about the various ways that religious thinkers became modern, even despite themselves.March 2010
-- Julia Phillips Cohen * Vanderbilt University *
Lehmann's book is clear and didactic, containing ... some eye-opening conclusions.April 2011
* American Historical Review *
. . . [a] detailed and profound study . . . . Lehman's book is an important comtribution to the study of Ottoman Jewry as well as of Middle Eastern social and cultural history in general.Vol. 40 2008
-- Rachel Simon * Princeton University Library *
. . . an incisive examination of rabbinic authors and their readers that highlights the importance of vernacular musar literature as a valuable and underutilized resource for the reconstruction of Ottoman Jewish culture. . . . [T]his book is a welcome addition to the burgeoning field of Sephardic and Mizrahi studies, and it should appeal to anyone interested in the interplay between religion and culture in the modern world.
* AJS Review *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
1 Historical Background
Part I Vernacular Musar Literature as a Cultural Factor
2 Print and the Vernacular: The Emergence of Ladino Reading Culture
Part II Authors, Translators, Readers
3 The Translation and Reception of Musar
4 "Pasar la Hora" or "Meldar"? Forms of Sociability
Part III Musar Literature and the Social Order
5 The Construction of the Social Order
6 Three Social Types: The Wealthy, the Poor, the Learned
7 The Representation of Gender
Part IV Exile and History
8 Understanding Exile, Setting Boundaries
9 The Impossible Homecoming
10 Reincarnation and the Discovery of History
Part V The Challenge of Modernity
11 Scientific and Rabbinic Knowledge and the Notion of Change
12 Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
Index