Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Cohen’swide-ranging expertise encompasses Jewish exegesis from both Islamic and Christian milieus, and he engages meaningfully with Islamic and Christian hermeneutics themselves. Likewise, his ability to draw from earlier rabbinic literature provides the reader with critical context. Cohen’s philologically and historically informed argument details the medieval Jewish appropriation of hermeneutical tools from competing religious traditions. His work challenges us to explore the theological anxieties occasioned by turning to other faith traditions for tools to interpret one’s own sacred canon. Cohen offers a major contribution to the development of peshat and an invitation for future scholarship in hermeneutics and adjacent fields." * Speculum *
"Cohen’s proficient use of both prior research and the primary sources is simultaneously far-reaching in breadth and granular in detail...Cohen’s insights are eye-opening, his examples clear and persuasive, and his conclusions leave no room for argument. For the scholar and lay person alike who mistakenly conceive of the Jewish tradition as self-contained and untouched by intellectual developments in the outside world, or for anyone interested in medieval Judaism, Cohen’s book is required reading." * Medieval Encounters *
"Cohen has made his point and made it well...[The] tug of war between peshat and nonpeshat interpretation, and the fluctuation in what peshat itself could mean, reflect a larger interpretive question: Does the precise formulation of Scripture matter, or (as Abraham Ibn Ezra asserted) did the Bible’s human writers formulate God’s ideas in language of their own? Cohen’s book will leave readers with four centuries’ worth of fascinating discussion of that question." * Review of Biblical Literature *
"The Rule of 'Peshat' is an enormously useful and brilliantly insightful work whose time has certainly come. Mordechai Z. Cohen's important contribution to the study of medieval Jewish biblical exegesis reflects his unsurpassed expertise in this area." * Baruch J. Schwartz, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem *
"In this monumental study, Mordechai Z. Cohen reveals the theoretical complexities that attend the construction of peshat, the 'plain sense' or 'literal sense' of Jewish biblical hermeneutics. Cohen's erudite and wide-ranging analysis breaks down what has been viewed too easily as monolithic. Through his acute readings, peshat emerges as a multi-linguistic and cross-cultural tradition, as Jewish interpreters amalgamated influences from Christianity and Islam, from Byzantium and Western Asia, and from al-Andalus to northern France and the Rhineland." * Rita Copeland, University of Pennsylvania *

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1. Geonim and Karaites: Appropriating Methods of Qur'an Interpretation
Chapter 2. The Andalusian School: Linguistic and Literary Advances in the Muslim Orbit
Chapter 3. Rashi: Peshat Revolution in Northern France
Chapter 4. Qara and Rashbam: Refining the Northern French Peshat Model
Chapter 5. The Byzantine Tradition: A Newly Discovered Exegetical School
Chapter 6. Abraham Ibn Ezra: Transplanted Andalusian Peshat Model
Chapter 7. Maimonides: Peshat as the Basis of Halakhah
Chapter 8. Nahmanides: A New Model of Scriptural Multivalence
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments

The Rule of Peshat

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    A Hardback by Mordechai Z. Cohen

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      View other formats and editions of The Rule of Peshat by Mordechai Z. Cohen

      Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
      Publication Date: 29/05/2020
      ISBN13: 9780812252125, 978-0812252125
      ISBN10: 0812252128

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Cohen’swide-ranging expertise encompasses Jewish exegesis from both Islamic and Christian milieus, and he engages meaningfully with Islamic and Christian hermeneutics themselves. Likewise, his ability to draw from earlier rabbinic literature provides the reader with critical context. Cohen’s philologically and historically informed argument details the medieval Jewish appropriation of hermeneutical tools from competing religious traditions. His work challenges us to explore the theological anxieties occasioned by turning to other faith traditions for tools to interpret one’s own sacred canon. Cohen offers a major contribution to the development of peshat and an invitation for future scholarship in hermeneutics and adjacent fields." * Speculum *
      "Cohen’s proficient use of both prior research and the primary sources is simultaneously far-reaching in breadth and granular in detail...Cohen’s insights are eye-opening, his examples clear and persuasive, and his conclusions leave no room for argument. For the scholar and lay person alike who mistakenly conceive of the Jewish tradition as self-contained and untouched by intellectual developments in the outside world, or for anyone interested in medieval Judaism, Cohen’s book is required reading." * Medieval Encounters *
      "Cohen has made his point and made it well...[The] tug of war between peshat and nonpeshat interpretation, and the fluctuation in what peshat itself could mean, reflect a larger interpretive question: Does the precise formulation of Scripture matter, or (as Abraham Ibn Ezra asserted) did the Bible’s human writers formulate God’s ideas in language of their own? Cohen’s book will leave readers with four centuries’ worth of fascinating discussion of that question." * Review of Biblical Literature *
      "The Rule of 'Peshat' is an enormously useful and brilliantly insightful work whose time has certainly come. Mordechai Z. Cohen's important contribution to the study of medieval Jewish biblical exegesis reflects his unsurpassed expertise in this area." * Baruch J. Schwartz, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem *
      "In this monumental study, Mordechai Z. Cohen reveals the theoretical complexities that attend the construction of peshat, the 'plain sense' or 'literal sense' of Jewish biblical hermeneutics. Cohen's erudite and wide-ranging analysis breaks down what has been viewed too easily as monolithic. Through his acute readings, peshat emerges as a multi-linguistic and cross-cultural tradition, as Jewish interpreters amalgamated influences from Christianity and Islam, from Byzantium and Western Asia, and from al-Andalus to northern France and the Rhineland." * Rita Copeland, University of Pennsylvania *

      Table of Contents

      List of Abbreviations
      Introduction
      Chapter 1. Geonim and Karaites: Appropriating Methods of Qur'an Interpretation
      Chapter 2. The Andalusian School: Linguistic and Literary Advances in the Muslim Orbit
      Chapter 3. Rashi: Peshat Revolution in Northern France
      Chapter 4. Qara and Rashbam: Refining the Northern French Peshat Model
      Chapter 5. The Byzantine Tradition: A Newly Discovered Exegetical School
      Chapter 6. Abraham Ibn Ezra: Transplanted Andalusian Peshat Model
      Chapter 7. Maimonides: Peshat as the Basis of Halakhah
      Chapter 8. Nahmanides: A New Model of Scriptural Multivalence
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index
      Acknowledgments

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