Description

Book Synopsis
Midrash is arguably the most ancient genre of Jewish literature, forming a voluminous body of scriptural exegesis over the course of centuries. There is hardly anything in the ancient rabbinic universe that was not taught through this medium. The diversity and development of that creative profusion are presented here in a new light. The contributors cover a broad range of texts, from late antiquity to the modern period and from all the centres of literary creativity, including non-rabbinic and non-Jewish literature, so that the full extent of the modes and transformations of Midrash can be fully appreciated. A comprehensive introduction situates Midrash in its historical and cultural setting, pointing to creative adaptations within the tradition and providing a sense of the variety of genres and applications discussed in the body of the book.

Bringing together an impressive array of the leading names in the field, the volume is innovative in both its scope and content, seeking to open a new period in the study of Midrash and its creative role in the formation of culture. It should be of interest to all scholars of Jewish studies, as well as to a wider readership interested in the interrelationships between hermeneutics, culture, and creativity, and especially in the afterlife of a classical genre and its ability to inspire new creativity in many forms.

Contributors: Philip Alexander, Sebastian Brock, Jacob Elbaum, Michael Fishbane, Robert Hayward, William Horbury, Sara Japhet, Ephraim Kanarfogel, Naftali Loewenthal, Ivan G. Marcus, Alison Salvesen, Marc Saperstein, Chava Turniansky, Piet van Boxel, Joanna Weinberg, Benjamin Williams, Elliot Wolfson, Eli Yassif.


Trade Review
'[Midrash Unbound] is, both in the field of Judaism but also in the various historical disciplines of religious studies and theology, indispensable.'
Görge K. Hasselhoff, Brill Review

'Midrash Unbound is a significant and substantial contribution to the study of midrashic literature, method and process as manifested in diverse Jewish sources and select non-Jewish writings, from Late Antiquity to the Modern age. Fishbane and Weinberg have brought together an impressive array of scholars to explore the nature of Midrash in varied historical and geographical contexts, pointing out, as the aptly chosen title suggests, transformations and innovations in the development of the genre. [...] It is a volume that enriches and meaningfully extends discussion on how we can understand Midrash and its development in diverse literary forms and historical contexts.' Dr Helen Spurling, BAJS Review

Table of Contents
Note on Transliteration

Introduction - Michael Fishbane and Joanna Weinberg

Part I Origins and Subsurface Traditions
1 Midrash and the Meaning of Scripture - Michael Fishbane
2 The Hand upon the Lord’s Throne: Targumic and Midrashic Perceptions of Exodus 17: 14--16 - Robert Hayward
3 Unwashed Hands: A Midrashic Controversy in the Gospel of Matthew - Piet van Boxel
4 ‘Tradunt Hebraei . . .’ The Problem of the Function and Reception of Jewish Midrash in Jerome - Alison Salvesen
5 Midrash in Syriac - Sebastian Brock

Part II Later Midrashic Forms
6 Piyut and Midrash: Between Poetic Invention and Rabbinic Convention - Michael Fishbane
7 The Mourners of Zion and the Suffering Messiah: Pesikta rabati 34---Structure, Theology, and Content - Philip Alexander
8 The Toledot jeshu as Midrash - William Horbury
9 Storytelling as Midrashic Discourse in the Middle Ages - Eli Yassif
10 Performative Midrash in the Memory of Ashkenazi Martyrs - Ivan G. Marcus

Part III Medieval Transformations
11 Midrash in a Leixical Key: The Arukh of Nathan ben Yehiel - Joanna Weinberg
12 Rashi’s Choice: The {H.}umash Commentary as Rewritten Midrash - Ivan G. Marcus
13 The Pendulum of Exegetical Methodology: From the Peshat to the Derash and Back - Sara Japhet
14 Midrashic Texts and Methods in Tosafist Torah Commentaries - Ephraim Kanarfogel
15 Zoharic Literature and Midrashic Temporality - Elliot Wolfson

Part IV Early Modern and Modern Traditions
16 The Ingathering of Midrash Rabbah - Benjamin Williams
17 Midrash in Medieval and Early Modern Sermons - Marc Saperstein
18 Rabbi Judah Loew of Prague and his Attitude to the Aggadah - Jacob Elbaum
19 The Destruction of the Temple: A Yiddish Booklet for the Ninth of Av - Jacob Elbaum and Chava Turniansky
20 Midrash in Habad Hasidism - Naftali Loewenthal

Notes on Contributors
Index

Midrash Unbound: Transformations and Innovations

    Product form

    £30.88

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Michael Fishbane, Joanna Weinberg


      View other formats and editions of Midrash Unbound: Transformations and Innovations by Michael Fishbane

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 14/06/2016
      ISBN13: 9781906764913, 978-1906764913
      ISBN10: 1906764913
      Also in:
      Judaism

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Midrash is arguably the most ancient genre of Jewish literature, forming a voluminous body of scriptural exegesis over the course of centuries. There is hardly anything in the ancient rabbinic universe that was not taught through this medium. The diversity and development of that creative profusion are presented here in a new light. The contributors cover a broad range of texts, from late antiquity to the modern period and from all the centres of literary creativity, including non-rabbinic and non-Jewish literature, so that the full extent of the modes and transformations of Midrash can be fully appreciated. A comprehensive introduction situates Midrash in its historical and cultural setting, pointing to creative adaptations within the tradition and providing a sense of the variety of genres and applications discussed in the body of the book.

      Bringing together an impressive array of the leading names in the field, the volume is innovative in both its scope and content, seeking to open a new period in the study of Midrash and its creative role in the formation of culture. It should be of interest to all scholars of Jewish studies, as well as to a wider readership interested in the interrelationships between hermeneutics, culture, and creativity, and especially in the afterlife of a classical genre and its ability to inspire new creativity in many forms.

      Contributors: Philip Alexander, Sebastian Brock, Jacob Elbaum, Michael Fishbane, Robert Hayward, William Horbury, Sara Japhet, Ephraim Kanarfogel, Naftali Loewenthal, Ivan G. Marcus, Alison Salvesen, Marc Saperstein, Chava Turniansky, Piet van Boxel, Joanna Weinberg, Benjamin Williams, Elliot Wolfson, Eli Yassif.


      Trade Review
      '[Midrash Unbound] is, both in the field of Judaism but also in the various historical disciplines of religious studies and theology, indispensable.'
      Görge K. Hasselhoff, Brill Review

      'Midrash Unbound is a significant and substantial contribution to the study of midrashic literature, method and process as manifested in diverse Jewish sources and select non-Jewish writings, from Late Antiquity to the Modern age. Fishbane and Weinberg have brought together an impressive array of scholars to explore the nature of Midrash in varied historical and geographical contexts, pointing out, as the aptly chosen title suggests, transformations and innovations in the development of the genre. [...] It is a volume that enriches and meaningfully extends discussion on how we can understand Midrash and its development in diverse literary forms and historical contexts.' Dr Helen Spurling, BAJS Review

      Table of Contents
      Note on Transliteration

      Introduction - Michael Fishbane and Joanna Weinberg

      Part I Origins and Subsurface Traditions
      1 Midrash and the Meaning of Scripture - Michael Fishbane
      2 The Hand upon the Lord’s Throne: Targumic and Midrashic Perceptions of Exodus 17: 14--16 - Robert Hayward
      3 Unwashed Hands: A Midrashic Controversy in the Gospel of Matthew - Piet van Boxel
      4 ‘Tradunt Hebraei . . .’ The Problem of the Function and Reception of Jewish Midrash in Jerome - Alison Salvesen
      5 Midrash in Syriac - Sebastian Brock

      Part II Later Midrashic Forms
      6 Piyut and Midrash: Between Poetic Invention and Rabbinic Convention - Michael Fishbane
      7 The Mourners of Zion and the Suffering Messiah: Pesikta rabati 34---Structure, Theology, and Content - Philip Alexander
      8 The Toledot jeshu as Midrash - William Horbury
      9 Storytelling as Midrashic Discourse in the Middle Ages - Eli Yassif
      10 Performative Midrash in the Memory of Ashkenazi Martyrs - Ivan G. Marcus

      Part III Medieval Transformations
      11 Midrash in a Leixical Key: The Arukh of Nathan ben Yehiel - Joanna Weinberg
      12 Rashi’s Choice: The {H.}umash Commentary as Rewritten Midrash - Ivan G. Marcus
      13 The Pendulum of Exegetical Methodology: From the Peshat to the Derash and Back - Sara Japhet
      14 Midrashic Texts and Methods in Tosafist Torah Commentaries - Ephraim Kanarfogel
      15 Zoharic Literature and Midrashic Temporality - Elliot Wolfson

      Part IV Early Modern and Modern Traditions
      16 The Ingathering of Midrash Rabbah - Benjamin Williams
      17 Midrash in Medieval and Early Modern Sermons - Marc Saperstein
      18 Rabbi Judah Loew of Prague and his Attitude to the Aggadah - Jacob Elbaum
      19 The Destruction of the Temple: A Yiddish Booklet for the Ninth of Av - Jacob Elbaum and Chava Turniansky
      20 Midrash in Habad Hasidism - Naftali Loewenthal

      Notes on Contributors
      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account