The Horizontal Society: Understanding the Covenant and Alphabetic Judaism (Vol. I and II)

Author:   Jose Faur
Publisher:   Academic Studies Press
ISBN:  

9781936235049


Pages:   676
Publication Date:   21 January 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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The Horizontal Society: Understanding the Covenant and Alphabetic Judaism (Vol. I and II)


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Overview

The Horizontal Society is an exposition of rabbinic thought as exemplified by Maimonides. The thought streams of Greece, Rome, and Christendom serve as a contrast. This work is in the Hebrew rhetorical tradition of melisa. The main text in five sections--The God of Israel, The Books of Israel, The Governance of Israel, The Memory of Israel, and The Folly of Israel-focuses on these core matters. It includes numerous references to orient the reader. The mode is similar to the author's previous work, such as Golden Doves with Silver Dots: Semiotics and Textuality in Rabbinic Tradition, interacting with the latest thought from today's academy. This book illustrates the horizontal organization of the Jewish people. Other social organization is based on hierarchy. Two principles made this difference possible for Israel. First, the Hebrew Scriptures alone propose that every human being is created in the image of God.This necessitates the absolute equality of every human being. Second, the Sinai covenant establishes the Law as the supreme authority. Whereas in other societies, might is the source of authority, in Judaism authority is limited by the Law. These principles were summarized by the last Prophet of Israel: ""Has not one God created us? Why do we deal treacherously..., profaning the covenant of our fathers?"" (Mal 2:10). There is a subdivided bibliography of forty pages, including both Jewish and ""Western"" sources. The scholarly apparatus includes indices of terms, names, and subjects. There are also seventy appendices of interest to rabbinic readership.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jose Faur
Publisher:   Academic Studies Press
Imprint:   Academic Studies Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.333kg
ISBN:  

9781936235049


ISBN 10:   1936235048
Pages:   676
Publication Date:   21 January 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Preface. Acknowledgements. Hebrew Transliteration Table. Abbreviations. Prologue. Section 1: The God of Israel. Introductory Remarks. 1. The Book of Creation. 2. Monolingualism and the Analphabetic Mind. 3. God as a Writer. 4. Of Scribes and Analphabetic Poets. Concluding Reflections. Section 2: The Books of Israel. Introductory Remarks. 5. the Berit ('Covenant') Sinai-Moab. 6. Scripture and the Mental Law of Israel. 7. The Publication of Scripture. 8. Epistles and Memoranda. 9. Interpreting the Books of Israel. 10. Law and the Judiciary. 11. The Boundaries Derasha. Concluding Reflections. Section 3: The Governance of Israel. Introductory Remarks. 12. Of Herut. 13. Hierarchic Humanity. 14. Horizontal Man. 15. The Household of Israel. 16. Humanity before Statehood. 17. God's Territory. 18. The Three Crowns of Israel. 19. Hebrew Theocracy: Sovereignty under the Law. 20. The Crown of a Good Name. 21. Galut: Right without Might. 22. Jewish Dominion over the Land of Israel. 23. Pagan Political Thought. 24. A Perfect Tora. 25. The Five Doctrines Taught by Patriarch Abraham. 26. The Two-Realm Governance. 27. Silencing Scripture. The Road to Serfdom: Freedom without Law. 29. Paul's Theo-politics. 30. Escape From Guilt. 31. Imperial Religion. 32. The Political Dimension of Anti-Semitism. 33. Two Concepts of Human Rights. 34. Pax Romana and Pax Hebraica. 35. The Sabbath is the Lord's. 36. Separating Church from State. Concluding Reflections. Section 4: The Memory of Israel. Introductory Remarks. 37. National Memory. 38. the Matrix of Jewish Memory. 39. Walking Under the Fox's Shadow. 40. The Emergence of the Sword / Cross Axis. 41. A Crisis of Memory. 42. Unmasking Spurious Versus Israel. 43. The Publication of the Mishna. 44. Minting Tradition into Oral Law. 45. National and Vernacular Memory. 46. Melisa and the Realm of the Verisimilar. 47. Expanding National Memory. 48. Kalla and the Formation of the Babylonian Talmud. Concluding Reflections. Section 5: The Folly of Israel. Introductory Remarks. 49. Qabbala and the Conveyance of Talmudic Tradition. 50. ""Little Foxes"" - Rabbis without Qabbala. 51. The Day of the Willow. 52. The Genesis of Jewish Heroic Virtue. 53. Heroic Knowledge. 54. Payback Time - The Case of Catalonian Rabbis. 55.""Our Lords, the Rabbis of France"". 56. Fighting Assimilation?. 57. Kabbalah vs. Qabbala. 58. Cult of the Occult. 59. The Anti-Scientific Obstinancy of Maimonideans. 60. The Five Pillars of Anti-Maimonidean Kabbalah. 61 The Problem with 'Philosophy'. 62. A Reflective Response to R. Hayye Gaon's Call. 63. The Mishne Tora. 64. Hierarchic Truth. 65. Inerrant Saint. 66. Israel's Fourth Miracle. Concluding Reflections. Epilogue. Hebrew Transliteration Table. Abbreviations. 1. Vocalization of the Scroll of the Tora. 2. Hebrew 'Writing' and 'Reading'. 3. Alphabetization and Masora. 4. Precept, Monolatry, and Sanctity. 5. Defilement of the Hands. 6. 'Depositing a Text' for Publication. 7. An Academy to Police the Hebrew Language. 8. Reciting a Text for Publication. 9. Wearing Phylacteries. 10. The Autonomy of the Law. 11. Alien Cult. 12. Morasha. 13. Becoming a Single Body. 14. Gideon and Washington. 15. The Concept of Galut. 16. By Virtue of Conquest. 17. Private Property. 18. Equality Before the Law. 19. T'M. 20. Malicious Erudition. 21. Why We Should all Strive to be Illiterate. 22. Purloining an Ass for Christ: Freedom without Law. 23. Ingesting Jesus. 24. Extreme Dichotomy. 25. Erasing the Memory of 'Amaleq. 26. 'Prophets / Scribes' and the National Archives of Israel. 27.Yeshiba. 28. Perush, Be'ur and Peshat. 29. Pappus b. Judah. 30. Verus Israel? 31. Remez. 32. Qabbala and Halakha. 33. Halakha le-Moshe mi-Sinai. 34. Derekh Qesara. 35. God's Mystery. 36. Seder. 37. The Four Levels of Instruction. 38. Teaching Tora in Public. 39 Shone: Rehearsing and Conveying Halakha. 40. Megillat Setarim. 41. The Publication of Oral Texts. 42. TQN. 43. The Introduction of the Monetary System in Rabbinic Tradition. 44. Oral Law. 45. Writing the Oral Law. 46. Was there a 'Dispensaton' to Write the Oral Law? 47. Hebrew hibber and Arabi tadwin. 48. Gemara and Talmud. 49. Emora. 50. National Publication for Use in Constitutional Interpretation: the Jewish and the US Systems. 51. Tanya Kevatteh. 52. Leaning Towards the Majority. 53. Mahdora. 54. ""Little Foxes"" 55. Minim and Minut. 56. Tikku. 57. About ""Strict Talmudists"". 58. Semantic Assimilation. 59. Heroes and Heroism. 60. Hasid and Hasidut. 61. The Targum. 62. Writing a Sefer Tora. 63. The Sorrowful Scholarship of Professor Baer. 64. Medieval Jewish Prophets. 65. The Science of Necromancy. 66. The Mandate of the Jewish Court According to Ramban. 67. The Ministry of Luminous Rabbis: Unerring and Inerrable. 68. Settled Law. 69. Relying on Legal Sources and Authorities. 70. The Library of Lucena. Bibliography. Indices.

Reviews

[Faur is] a great specialist in Talmudic literature in whom we can see a scholarship of the same caliber as Saul Lieberman or David Weiss Halivni. -- Thierry Alcoloumbre An extraordinary synthesis of his three previous English-language works, particularly his groundbreaking study Golden Doves with Silver Dots... It is the indispensable concept of Religious Humanism that has served as the central theme of Jose Faur's many writings and in The Horizontal Society he gives the reader the summa of his thinking on the subject, thus offering the most illuminating introduction to Jewish civilization that we currently possess. -- David Sasha, Director of the Center for Sephardic Heritage in Brooklyn, New York


an extraordinary synthesis of his three previous English-language works, particularly his groundbreaking study Golden Doves with Silver Dots... It is the indispensable concept of Religious Humanism that has served as the central theme of Jose Faur's many writings and in The Horizontal Society he gives the reader the summa of his thinking on the subject, thus offering the most illuminating introduction to Jewish civilization that we currently possess. -- David Sasha, Director of the Center for Sephardic Heritage in Brooklyn, New York.


An extraordinary synthesis of his three previous English-language works, particularly his groundbreaking study Golden Doves with Silver Dots... It is the indispensable concept of Religious Humanism that has served as the central theme of Jose Faur's many writings and in The Horizontal Society he gives the reader the summa of his thinking on the subject, thus offering the most illuminating introduction to Jewish civilization that we currently possess. --David Sasha, Director of the Center for Sephardic Heritage in Brooklyn, New York [Faur is] a great specialist in Talmudic literature in whom we can see a scholarship of the same caliber as Saul Lieberman or David Weiss Halivni. --Thierry Alcoloumbre


An extraordinary synthesis of his three previous English-language works, particularly his groundbreaking study Golden Doves with Silver Dots It is the indispensable concept of Religious Humanism that has served as the central theme of Jose Faur s many writings and in The Horizontal Society he gives the reader the summa of his thinking on the subject, thus offering the most illuminating introduction to Jewish civilization that we currently possess. -- David Sasha, Director of the Center for Sephardic Heritage in Brooklyn, New York.


Author Information

Jos Faur (PhD 1964, University of Barcelona) is Professor Emeritus, Law School, Netanya Academic College, Netanya, Israel. He was the first Jewish recipient of a doctorate from the University of Barcelona since the Expulsion in 1492. He has taught at JTS and Bar-Ilan University and published in Hebrew, Spanish, French, Italian and English. His books include: Golden Doves with Silver Dots: Semiotics and Textuality in Rabbinic Tradition (Indiana UP, 1986); In the Shadow of History: Iberian Jews and Conversos at the Dawn of Modernity (SUNY, 1992); Homo Mysticus: A Guide To Maimonides's Guide for the Perplexed (Syracuse UP, 1998).

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