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OverviewShoes are an integral part of Jewish material culture. Although they appear in some of the most foundational biblical stories, they are generally regarded as no more than lowly, albeit essential, accessories. Jews and Shoes takes a fresh look at the makings and meanings of shoes, cobblers, and barefootedness in Jewish experience. The book shows how shoes convey theological, social, and economic concepts, and as such are intriguing subjects for inquiry within a wide range of cultural, artistic, and historic contexts. The book's multidisciplinary approach encompasses a wide range of contributions from disciplines as diverse as fashion, visual culture, history, anthropology, Bible and Talmud, and performance studies. Jews and Shoes will appeal to students, scholars and general readers alike who are interested to find out more about the practical and symbolic significance of shoes in Jewish culture since antiquity. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Edna NahshonPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Berg Publishers Dimensions: Width: 17.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 24.40cm Weight: 0.610kg ISBN: 9781847880499ISBN 10: 1847880495 Pages: 338 Publication Date: 01 August 2008 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. Jews and Shoes, Edna Nahshon Part 1: Religion and the Bible 2. The Biblical Shoe: 'Eschewing Footwear: The Call of Moses as Biblical Archetype', Ora Prouser 3. The Halitzah Shoe: Between Female Subjugation and Symbolic Emasculation, Catherine Hezser 4. The Tombstone Shoe: Shoe-Shaped Tombstones in Jewish Cemeteries in the Ukraine, Rivka Parciack 5. The Israeli Shoe: Biblical Sandals and Native Israeli Identity, Orna Ben-Meir Part 2: Memories and Commemoration 6. The Shtetl Shoe: How to Make a Shoe, Mayer Kirshenblatt and Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett 7. The Folkloristic Shoe: Shoes and Shoemakers in Yiddish Language and Folklore, Robert A. Rothstein 8. The Holocaust Shoe: Untying Memory: Shoes as Holocaust Memorial Experience, Jeffrey Feldman Part 3: Ideology and Economics 9. Wanderer's Shoe: The Cobbler's Penalty: The Wandering Jew in Search for Salvation, Shelly Zer-Zion 10. The Equalizing Shoe: Shoes as a Symbol of Equality in the Jewish Society in Palestine during the First Half of the Twentieth Century, Ayala Raz Part 4: Theatre, Art and Film 11. The Fetishist's Shoe: Poems of Pedal Atrocity: Sexuality, Ethnicity, and Religion in the Art of Bruno Schulz, Andrew Ingall 12. The Artist's Shoe: Digging Into the Jewish Roots of Shoe-Field, Sonya Rapoport 13. The Theatrical Shoe: The Utterance of Shoemaking: Cobblers on the Israeli Stage, Dorit Yerushalmi 14. The Cinematic Shoe: Ernst Lubitsch's East European Touch in Pinkus's Shoe Palace, Jeanette MalkinReviewsAfter reading Jews and Shoes, one will no longer view that essential part of the wardrobe as a mere item of necessity. Jewish Book World This highly original volume makes itself indispensable as much through the extraordinary range of perspectives as through the lucidity and insights of the individual papers. It highlights how an appreciation of biblical roots and later religious commentary gives us an understanding of later folklore, theatrical and literary creativity, and ultimately contemporary politics. Rickie Burman, Director, The Jewish Museum, London Moving with ease from the sacred to the profane, from canonical works to the realm of public culture, from social to cultural history, Jews and Shoes invests great significance to what might seem at first blush to be utterly ordinary. No one, after reading this book, will however think of shoes as just 'being there.' Nahshon's Jewish shoes shows how everything has a history worth analyzing and reading about. Hasia R. Diner, Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History, New York University Jews and Shoes is a remarkable and wonderful offbeat collection of pieces on shoes (or the lack of them) from Moses' refusal to wear them to Ernst Lubitsch's evocation of WWI Berlin's Jewish world of shoe selling. A wild mix of cultural history (Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimlett and her father Mayer's images of shoe making), anthropology (Rivka Parciack on Jewish tombstones in the shape of shoes), and literary study (Andrew Ingall on Bruno Schulz), this is a great book of everyone who wears shoes, is Jewish or is Jewish and wears shoes. Sander L. Gilman, author of The Jew's Body From ancient biblical references, to contemporary Jewish law, the book takes the reader on a journey that highlights the religious, social and political significance of footwear in Jewish life. Footwear News I, too, was amazed at how this footnote of a topic yielded so much as a survey for the Semites. Rhonda Lieberman, Bookforum A fascinating new book provides a shoe and tell of the many connections between footwear and the Jewish people. Pauline Dubkin Yearwood, Chicago Jewish News I found the essays engaging and, at times, absolutely fascinating ... I applaud the volume, especially its creativity and new insights, as a lively contribution to Jewish studies. Try it on for size. I did, and it was a wonderful, delightful stroll. Shofar After reading Jews and Shoes, one will no longer view that essential part of the wardrobe as a mere item of necessity. Jewish Book World This highly original volume makes itself indispensable as much through the extraordinary range of perspectives as through the lucidity and insights of the individual papers. It highlights how an appreciation of biblical roots and later religious commentary gives us an understanding of later folklore, theatrical and literary creativity, and ultimately contemporary politics. Rickie Burman, Director, The Jewish Museum, London Moving with ease from the sacred to the profane, from canonical works to the realm of public culture, from social to cultural history, Jews and Shoes invests great significance to what might seem at first blush to be utterly ordinary. No one, after reading this book, will however think of shoes as just 'being there.' Nahshon's Jewish shoes shows how everything has a history worth analyzing and reading about. Hasia R. Diner, Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History, New York University Jews and Shoes is a remarkable and wonderful offbeat collection of pieces on shoes (or the lack of them) from Moses' refusal to wear them to Ernst Lubitsch's evocation of WWI Berlin's Jewish world of shoe selling. A wild mix of cultural history (Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimlett and her father Mayer's images of shoe making), anthropology (Rivka Parciack on Jewish tombstones in the shape of shoes), and literary study (Andrew Ingall on Bruno Schulz), this is a great book of everyone who wears shoes, is Jewish or is Jewish and wears shoes. Sander L. Gilman, author of The Jew's Body From ancient biblical references, to contemporary Jewish law, the book takes the reader on a journey that highlights the religious, social and political significance of footwear in Jewish life. Footwear News I, too, was amazed at how this footnote of a topic yielded so much as a survey for the Semites. Rhonda Lieberman, Bookforum After reading Jews and Shoes, one will no longer view that essential part of the wardrobe as a mere item of necessity. Jewish Book World This highly original volume makes itself indispensable as much through the extraordinary range of perspectives as through the lucidity and insights of the individual papers. It highlights how an appreciation of biblical roots and later religious commentary gives us an understanding of later folklore, theatrical and literary creativity, and ultimately contemporary politics. Rickie Burman, Director, The Jewish Museum, London Moving with ease from the sacred to the profane, from canonical works to the realm of public culture, from social to cultural history, Jews and Shoes invests great significance to what might seem at first blush to be utterly ordinary. No one, after reading this book, will however think of shoes as just 'being there.' Nahshon's Jewish shoes shows how everything has a history worth analyzing and reading about. Hasia R. Diner, Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History, New York University Jews and Shoes is a remarkable and wonderful offbeat collection of pieces on shoes (or the lack of them) from Moses' refusal to wear them to Ernst Lubitsch's evocation of WWI Berlin's Jewish world of shoe selling. A wild mix of cultural history (Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimlett and her father Mayer's images of shoe making), anthropology (Rivka Parciack on Jewish tombstones in the shape of shoes), and literary study (Andrew Ingall on Bruno Schulz), this is a great book of everyone who wears shoes, is Jewish or is Jewish and wears shoes. Sander L. Gilman, author of The Jew's Body From ancient biblical references, to contemporary Jewish law, the book takes the reader on a journey that highlights the religious, social and political significance of footwear in Jewish life. Footwear News I, too, was amazed at how this footnote of a topic yielded so much as a survey for the Semites. Rhonda Lieberman, Bookforum A fascinating new book provides a shoe and tell of the many connections between footwear and the Jewish people. Pauline Dubkin Yearwood, Chicago Jewish News I found the essays engaging and, at times, absolutely fascinating ... I applaud the volume, especially its creativity and new insights, as a lively contribution to Jewish studies. Try it on for size. I did, and it was a wonderful, delightful stroll. Shofar This book provides valuable lenses through which to examine the shoe in Jewish cultural and religious history: as the social biography of an ever-present object, as an historic examination of Jews in society, as a themed sampling of significant Jewish literary and artistic expressions, and as a material entree into worlds of immateriality. Nashon moves the reader through cultural histories, disparate lands, and artistic imaginations to track the footprints that Jews have made on the history of the shoe. Museum Anthropology After reading Jews and Shoes, one will no longer view that essential part of the wardrobe as a mere item of necessity. Jewish Book World This highly original volume makes itself indispensable as much through the extraordinary range of perspectives as through the lucidity and insights of the individual papers. It highlights how an appreciation of biblical roots and later religious commentary gives us an understanding of later folklore, theatrical and literary creativity, and ultimately contemporary politics. Rickie Burman, Director, The Jewish Museum, London Moving with ease from the sacred to the profane, from canonical works to the realm of public culture, from social to cultural history, Jews and Shoes invests great significance to what might seem at first blush to be utterly ordinary. No one, after reading this book, will however think of shoes as just 'being there.' Nahshon's Jewish shoes shows how everything has a history worth analyzing and reading about. Hasia R. Diner, Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History, New York University Jews and Shoes is a remarkable and wonderful offbeat collection of pieces on shoes (or the lack of them) from Moses' refusal to wear them to Ernst Lubitsch's evocation of WWI Berlin's Jewish world of shoe selling. A wild mix of cultural history (Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimlett and her father Mayer's images of shoe making), anthropology (Rivka Parciack on Jewish tombstones in the shape of shoes), and literary study (Andrew Ingall on Bruno Schulz), this is a great book of everyone who wears shoes, is Jewish or is Jewish and wears shoes. Sander L. Gilman, author of The Jew's Body From ancient biblical references, to contemporary Jewish law, the book takes the reader on a journey that highlights the religious, social and political significance of footwear in Jewish life. Footwear News I, too, was amazed at how this footnote of a topic yielded so much as a survey for the Semites. Rhonda Lieberman, Bookforum A fascinating new book provides a shoe and tell of the many connections between footwear and the Jewish people. Pauline Dubkin Yearwood, Chicago Jewish News Author InformationEdna Nahshon is Associate Professor of Hebrew at the Jewish Theological Seminary and Senior Associate, Centre of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, Oxford University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |