Description

Book Synopsis

Examines a series of powerful artifacts traditionally associated with King Solomon, largely via extra-canonical textual sources--Solomon’s ring, bottles to contain evil forces, the so-called Solomon’s knot, a shamir, and a flying carpet--and traces their varying cultural resonances.



Trade Review

“Whether or not King Solomon was a real historical figure, he has left an imprint on the collective imagination of Jews, Christians, and Muslims—a physical imprint in the form of special rings, bottles, carpets, and other objects thought to manifest the king’s legendary magical powers. Iafrate’s study illumines the ancient and medieval history of these various magical objects, but more than that, it is a model of how to combine historical inquiry into the Bible's reception with sophisticated study of material religion. This book has much to teach those with an interest in the religious origins of magical symbols, but it is also a marvelously innovative study of the history of biblical interpretation that shows what we can learn by thinking of the Bible three-dimensionally.”

—Steven Weitzman,author of Solomon: The Lure of Wisdom


“Iafrate nimbly maneuvers among the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim literatures on Solomon as well as between the canonical and non-canonical texts of these three religions. She also expressly and sensitively considers the materiality of the objects taken from Solomon’s ‘cabinet,’ carefully tracing their literary emergence and transformations, allowing literary imaginations to develop material features, real in a quite different way. Through case studies in the polysemic appreciation of cultural objects, this work becomes a guidebook on how historical cultural objects sustain multiple meanings across time and cultures.”

—David J. Collins, S.J.,editor of The Sacred and the Sinister: Studies in Medieval Religion and Magic


“A pioneering attempt to write a material history of magical objects. Training her sights on a well-curated collection of items associated with the magical powers of King Solomon, Iafrate traces with exquisite care the ‘biographies’ of these devices as they move through time and between cultures. Beyond documenting the many symbolic and material permutations of these Solomonic objects across Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, she also demonstrates how integral—even essential—their material, morphological, and aesthetic properties are to their ritual efficacy.”

—Ra‘anan Boustan,author of From Martyr to Mystic: Rabbinic Martyrology and the Making of Merkavah Mysticism


“After her Wandering Throne of Solomon, Allegra Iafrate continues her exciting investigations by studying five ‘Solomonic magical objects’: the ring used to control demons; the bottles in which he was said to constrain them; the so-called Solomon’s knot; the shamir, a mythical object, known for its ability to cut through stone; and the flying carpet. This breathtaking study confirms the talent of one of the brightest historians of medieval art of her generation.”

—Jean-Patrice Boudet,Université d'Orléans



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Solomon’s Cabinet of Curiosities: Objects from an Uncanonical Collection

1. Magical Objects and Where to Find Them

2. The Signet Ring

3. Bottles for the Demons

4. Much Ado About Knotting

5. The Metamorphic Shamir

6. Carpets and Other Flying Devices

Conclusion: “Of the Cosmopolitan Destiny of Magical Objects”

Notes

Bibliography

Index

The Long Life of Magical Objects

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    A Paperback / softback by Allegra Iafrate

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      View other formats and editions of The Long Life of Magical Objects by Allegra Iafrate

      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: 22/01/2021
      ISBN13: 9780271083674, 978-0271083674
      ISBN10: 0271083670

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Examines a series of powerful artifacts traditionally associated with King Solomon, largely via extra-canonical textual sources--Solomon’s ring, bottles to contain evil forces, the so-called Solomon’s knot, a shamir, and a flying carpet--and traces their varying cultural resonances.



      Trade Review

      “Whether or not King Solomon was a real historical figure, he has left an imprint on the collective imagination of Jews, Christians, and Muslims—a physical imprint in the form of special rings, bottles, carpets, and other objects thought to manifest the king’s legendary magical powers. Iafrate’s study illumines the ancient and medieval history of these various magical objects, but more than that, it is a model of how to combine historical inquiry into the Bible's reception with sophisticated study of material religion. This book has much to teach those with an interest in the religious origins of magical symbols, but it is also a marvelously innovative study of the history of biblical interpretation that shows what we can learn by thinking of the Bible three-dimensionally.”

      —Steven Weitzman,author of Solomon: The Lure of Wisdom


      “Iafrate nimbly maneuvers among the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim literatures on Solomon as well as between the canonical and non-canonical texts of these three religions. She also expressly and sensitively considers the materiality of the objects taken from Solomon’s ‘cabinet,’ carefully tracing their literary emergence and transformations, allowing literary imaginations to develop material features, real in a quite different way. Through case studies in the polysemic appreciation of cultural objects, this work becomes a guidebook on how historical cultural objects sustain multiple meanings across time and cultures.”

      —David J. Collins, S.J.,editor of The Sacred and the Sinister: Studies in Medieval Religion and Magic


      “A pioneering attempt to write a material history of magical objects. Training her sights on a well-curated collection of items associated with the magical powers of King Solomon, Iafrate traces with exquisite care the ‘biographies’ of these devices as they move through time and between cultures. Beyond documenting the many symbolic and material permutations of these Solomonic objects across Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, she also demonstrates how integral—even essential—their material, morphological, and aesthetic properties are to their ritual efficacy.”

      —Ra‘anan Boustan,author of From Martyr to Mystic: Rabbinic Martyrology and the Making of Merkavah Mysticism


      “After her Wandering Throne of Solomon, Allegra Iafrate continues her exciting investigations by studying five ‘Solomonic magical objects’: the ring used to control demons; the bottles in which he was said to constrain them; the so-called Solomon’s knot; the shamir, a mythical object, known for its ability to cut through stone; and the flying carpet. This breathtaking study confirms the talent of one of the brightest historians of medieval art of her generation.”

      —Jean-Patrice Boudet,Université d'Orléans



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations

      Acknowledgments

      Solomon’s Cabinet of Curiosities: Objects from an Uncanonical Collection

      1. Magical Objects and Where to Find Them

      2. The Signet Ring

      3. Bottles for the Demons

      4. Much Ado About Knotting

      5. The Metamorphic Shamir

      6. Carpets and Other Flying Devices

      Conclusion: “Of the Cosmopolitan Destiny of Magical Objects”

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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