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Jacob´s Shipwreck: Diaspora, Translation, and Jewish-Christian Relations in Medieval England
Ruth Nisse
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Description for Jacob´s Shipwreck: Diaspora, Translation, and Jewish-Christian Relations in Medieval England
Hardback. Num Pages: 248 pages. BIC Classification: DSBB. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 152. .
Jewish and Christian authors of the High Middle Ages not infrequently came into dialogue or conflict with each other over traditions drawn from ancient writings outside of the bible. Circulating in Latin and Hebrew adaptations and translations, these included the two independent versions of the Testament of Naphtali in which the patriarch has a vision of the Diaspora, a shipwreck that scatters the twelve tribes. The Christian narrative is linear and ends in salvation; the Jewish narrative is circular and pessimistic. For Ruth Nisse, this is an emblematic text that illuminates relationships between interpretation, translation, and survival.
In Nisse’s account, ... Read moreextrabiblical literature encompasses not only the historical works of Flavius Josephus but also, in some of the more ingenious medieval Hebrew imaginative texts, Aesop’s fables and the Aeneid. While Christian-Jewish relations in medieval England and Northern France are most often associated with Christian polemics against Judaism and persecutions of Jews in the wake of the Crusades, the period also saw a growing interest in language study and translation in both communities. These noncanonical texts and their afterlives provided Jews and Christians alike with resources of fiction that they used to reconsider boundaries of doctrine and interpretation. Among the works that Nisse takes as exemplary of this intersection are the Book of Yosippon, a tenth-century Hebrew adaptation of Josephus with a wide circulation and influence in the later middle ages, and the second-century romance of Aseneth about the religious conversion of Joseph’s Egyptian wife. Yosippon gave Jews a new discourse of martyrdom in its narrative of the fall of Jerusalem, and at the same time it offered access to the classical historical models being used by their Christian contemporaries. Aseneth provided its new audience of medieval monks with a way to reimagine the troubling consequences of unwilling Jewish converts.
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Product Details
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Place of Publication
Ithaca, United States
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About Ruth Nisse
Ruth Nisse is Associate Professor of English and Jewish Studies at Wesleyan University. She is the author of Defining Acts.
Reviews for Jacob´s Shipwreck: Diaspora, Translation, and Jewish-Christian Relations in Medieval England
Jacob's Shipwreck is a learned volume that carries significant repercussions.... [Her] well-made argument that Christians and Jews shared quite a bit in terms of the texts and ideas that are the focus of her study apparently applies to Jewish biblical interpreters, certain liturgical poets and scholars, polemicists, and sui generis polyglots such as Berekhiah. She has produced a first-rate study ... Read morethat will likely engender further discussion, as well as new avenues of research.
Reading Religion
With this book, Nisse adds to the understanding of how Jews resisted and absorbed Christian culture and how Christians, in turn, responded to Jews. Anyone interested in the complexities of medieval Christian-Jewish relations and how to study them could benefit from this book.
Choice
Ruth Nisse's extraordinary book, beautifully designed and produced by Cornell University Press, leads us in a new and altogether welcome direction in the study of the intellectual relationships between medieval Jews and Christians.
AJS Review
Jacob's Shipwreck is an important contribution to our understanding of Latin Christendom as home to both Christians and Jews. Examining a group of post-biblical Jewish texts that scholars of both religions translated, adapted and eventually anthologized during the Central Middle Ages, Ruth Nisse deepens our understanding and stimulates new questions.... The vast array of scholarship obvious in the sixty-five pages of notes and bibliography will interest medievalists of many disciplines.... It is not possible to give the reader [of this review] more than a taste of the richness of this book but it deserves to be read by scholars of history, religion, language, and literature.
The Medieval Review
Ambitious and erudite, Jacob's Shipwreck explores texts that circulated in Jewish and Christian communities of medieval England [and] exemplify long-standing tensions between the two... This review can only gesture at the intricacies of Nisse's arguments... This dissection of the labyrinthine intercultural negotiations of medieval Jews and Christians stimulates and provokes, and will bear repeated reading and reflection.
American Historical Review
Nisse's book directly addresses the absence of references in the standard scholarship on the Hebrew language and Jewish literature in England.... She proves that French, English, and Latin tongues were not the only languages being spoken and used in medieval England.... Seeking to establish presence where there was once absence, each chapter of Jacob's Shipwreck illustrates to what extent a Jewish author or a Hebrew text influenced the surrounding Christian culture.
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