Josephus in modern Jewish culture / / edited by Andrea Schatz.

The contributions to this volume trace for the first time how the modern Jewish reception of Josephus, the ancient historian, who witnessed and described the destruction of the Second Temple, took shape within different scholarly, religious, literary and political contexts across the Jewish world, f...

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Place / Publishing House:Leiden;, Boston : : Brill,, [2019]
©2019.
Year of Publication:2019
Language:English
Series:Studies in Jewish History and Culture 55.
Physical Description:1 online resource (372 pages).
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Other title:Front Matter --
Copyright page --
Preface --
Abbreviations --
Notes on Contributors --
Reading and Re-writing Josephus for Modern Times /
Josephus in Early Modern Jewish Thought from Menasseh to Spinoza /
Hidden Polemic: Josephus’s Work in the Historical Writings of Jacques Basnage and Menaḥem Amelander /
A Tradition in the Plural: Reframing Sefer Yosippon for Modern Times /
The ‘Maskil Hero’: the Image of Josephus in the Worldview of the Jewish Enlightenment /
Josephus and the Jewish Chronicle: 1841–1855 /
Kalman Schulman’s Josephus and the Counter-History of the Haskalah /
Kalman Schulman’s Hebrew Translation of Josephus’s Jewish War /
In the Shadow of Napoleon: the Reception of Josephus in the Writings of Jost, Salvador and Graetz /
Dismantling Orientalist Fantasies and Protestant Hegemony: German Jewish Exegetes and Their Retrieval of Josephus the Jew /
Can’t Live with Him, Can’t Live without Him: Josephus in the Orthodox Historiography of Isaac Halevy and Ze’ev Yavetz /
Josephus through the Eyes of Zvi Hirsch Masliansky (1856–1943): between Eastern Europe, the USA and Eretz Yisra’el /
Taking Josephus Personally: the Curious Case of Emanuel Bin Gorion /
‘Flavius’ on Trial in Mandate Palestine, 1932–1945: Natan Bistritzky’s Hebrew Play and Lion Feuchtwanger’s German Trilogy /
Reading and Interpreting Flavius Josephus in the Vilna and Warsaw Ghettos (1941–1943) /
Back Matter --
Index.
Summary:The contributions to this volume trace for the first time how the modern Jewish reception of Josephus, the ancient historian, who witnessed and described the destruction of the Second Temple, took shape within different scholarly, religious, literary and political contexts across the Jewish world, from Amsterdam to Berlin, Vilna, Breslau, New York and Tel Aviv. The chapters show how the vagaries of his tumultuous life, spent between a small rebellious nation and the ruling circles of a vast empire, between Jewish and non-Jewish cultures, and between political action and historical reflection have been re-imagined by Jewish readers over the past three centuries in their attempts to make sense of their own times.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:9004393099
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Andrea Schatz.