Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Rewriting the Talmud: The Fourth Century Origins of Bavil Rosh Hashanah [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 162 pages, aukštis x plotis: 163x243 mm, weight: 408 g
  • Serija: Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 175
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2019
  • Leidėjas: Mohr Siebeck
  • ISBN-10: 3161541235
  • ISBN-13: 9783161541230
  • Formatas: Hardback, 162 pages, aukštis x plotis: 163x243 mm, weight: 408 g
  • Serija: Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism 175
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2019
  • Leidėjas: Mohr Siebeck
  • ISBN-10: 3161541235
  • ISBN-13: 9783161541230
In this study, Marcus Mordecai Schwartz argues that there were two distinct periods in which traditions from Rabbinic Palestine exerted their influence upon extended passages of B. Rosh Hashanah. This doubling of influence resulted in a Babylonian-born text with two distinct Palestinian ancestries. This oddly mixed parentage was responsible for Bavli texts that both resemble synoptic passages in the Yerusalmi and differ from them in substantial ways. The main project of this book is to trace the dynamics of this doubled Palestinian influence and to account for the mark it left on passages of B. Rosh Hashanah.
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1(22)
1 Initial Influences and Hypothesis
3(5)
2 Additional Scholarly Influences
8(8)
a) The Role of the Early Amoraim
8(7)
b) The Role of Middle-Generation Babylonian Amoraim
15(1)
3 Methodology and Application
16(7)
Part I Rav Hisda
23(40)
Chapter One Hisda Dicta and Materials in the Yerushalmi
25(15)
1 This Law
26(5)
2 Documents
31(3)
3 The New Year for Kings
34(6)
Chapter Two The Cove-sugya
40(19)
1 The First Stammaitic Interlude: 2a: 15, 2b:5
40(1)
2 Toseftan baraita: 2b:5--10
41(1)
3 The Second Stammaitic Interlude: 2b: 10--21
41(1)
4 Rabbi Yohanan's Dictum: 2b:21--28
42(2)
5 Stammaitic Challenges: 2b:28, 3a:23
44(8)
6 Rabbi Elazar's Dictum, 3a:23--26
52(1)
7 Ravina and Rav Ashi, 3a:26--32
52(3)
8 Baraita in support of Rabbi Yohanan, 3a:32--42
55(4)
Chapter Three Summary and Conclusions
59(4)
Part II Rava
63(44)
Chapter One Concerning Rava and Rabbah
65(2)
Chapter Two Structures and Themes
67(13)
1 The Bavli Passage
67(7)
2 The Yerushalmi Passage
74(6)
Chapter Three Analysis of B. Rosh Hashanah 29b:24--30a:34
80(26)
1 Section One: Units 1--4
81(7)
a) Conclusion One: Rava appears as the main voice at unit 2, not Rabbah
81(1)
b) Conclusion Two: Rava drew on Palestinian material
82(2)
c) Conclusion Three: Rava may have adapted Babylonian material from other redacted Babylonian contexts and incorporated them in a new sugya
84(1)
d) Conclusion Four: Section one of our passage was originally a separate sugya from sections two and three
85(3)
2 The Baraita of the House of Shemuel
88(5)
3 Rabbah
93(4)
4 Sections Two and Three: Units 5--8
97(9)
a) Rabbi Hiyya b. Gamda's Statement
99(1)
b) The Editorial Frame
100(2)
c) Recapitulation of the Structure of the Yerushalmi
102(4)
Chapter Four Summary and Conclusions
106(1)
Conclusion
107(14)
1 Corroborating Assumptions
107(3)
2 The Content of This Study
110(1)
3 Rav Hisda
111(2)
4 Rava
113(5)
5 The Relevance of This Study
118(3)
Appendices to Part I
121(8)
1 Hebrew text: JTS 108 EMC 319 B. Rosh Hashanah 2a:10--3a:41
121(2)
2 An Aggadic Example
123(3)
3 Hisda Citations in B. Rosh Hashanah
126(3)
a) References 6 and 12 (8a:38, 8b:10)
127(1)
b) Reference 18 (17a:43)
127(1)
c) Reference 20
127(2)
Appendices to Part II
129(14)
1 Hebrew Text: JTS 108 EMC 319 B. Rosh Hashanah 29b:24--30a:34
129(1)
2 Midrashic Synopsis
130(1)
3 Rava Citations with Yerushalmi Parallels
131(12)
Bibliography
133(10)
Index of Sources 143(3)
Index of Subjects and Names 146
Born 1971; BA from the University of Nebraska; Rabbi, MA, MPhil, PhD, from The Jewish Theological Seminary; currently serves as director of the Beit Midrash, head of the the Nishma summer program, and assistant professor of Talmud and Rabbinics at The Jewish Theological Seminary of America.