A Universal art : : Hebrew grammar across disciplines and faiths / / edited by Nadia Vidro, Irene E. Zwiep, Judith Olszowy-Schlanger.

A Universal Art. Hebrew Grammar Across Disciplines and Faiths reflects on medieval and early modern Hebrew linguistics as a discipline that crossed geographic and religious borders and linked up with a plethora of scholarly activities, from Judaeo-Arabic Bible translations to the Renaissance search...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Studies in Jewish History and Culture, Volume 46
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden, Netherlands : : Brill,, 2014.
©2014
Year of Publication:2014
Language:English
Series:Studies in Jewish history and culture ; Volume 46.
Physical Description:1 online resource (264 p.)
Notes:Includes index.
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Other title:Preliminary Material --
Introduction: Paradigms We Live By /
The Medieval Karaite Tradition of Hebrew Grammar /
Morphology versus Meaning: Biblical Mixed Roots and Andalusi Hebrew Lexicographical Theories /
Whether to Capture Form or Meaning: A Typology of Early Judaeo-Arabic Pentateuch Translations /
The Impact of Teytsh on Diqduq, or: Why the Metaphor Became a Noun in Early Modern Ashkenazi Linguistics /
Towards a ‘Mapping’ of the Hebrew Grammatical Terminology of the Middle Ages: A History of Transmission /
The Birth of the Medieval Hebrew Mathematical Language as Manifest in Ibn al-Aḥdab’s Epistle of the Number /
Fragments of Linguistics Works from the Italian Geniza /
Another Glance at a Gifted Grammarian: More on Shabbethai Sofer of Przemysl /
“With That, You Can Grasp All the Hebrew Language”: Hebrew Sources of an Anonymous Hebrew-Latin Grammar from Thirteenth-Century England /
The Quest for the Holiest Alphabet in the Renaissance /
Index of Names --
Index of Places --
Index of Works --
Index of Terminology.
Summary:A Universal Art. Hebrew Grammar Across Disciplines and Faiths reflects on medieval and early modern Hebrew linguistics as a discipline that crossed geographic and religious borders and linked up with a plethora of scholarly activities, from Judaeo-Arabic Bible translations to the Renaissance search for the holiest alphabet. This collection of articles presents a cross-section of new research avenues on Hebraism, Karaite, Rabbanite and Christian, with an emphasis on the transmission of linguistic ideas through time and space among different communities, cultures and religious currents. The resulting picture is one of intrinsic variation and dynamic growth as opposed to the linear paradigm of development, culmination and stagnation current in the historiography of Hebrew linguistics.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and indexes at the end of each chapters.
ISBN:9004277056
ISSN:1568-5004 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Nadia Vidro, Irene E. Zwiep, Judith Olszowy-Schlanger.