Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations and References
- A Note of Introduction
- 1 The Prehistory of Judaism
- 2 The Beginnings of Monotheism
- 3 The Book and the People
- 4 Crisis and a New Beginning
- 5 The First Kingdom of Judaea
- 6 Diaspora and Homeland
- 7 A Century of Disasters
- 8 The Rebirth of Judaism
- 9 The Rabbis and Their Torah
- 10 The End of Ancient History
- APPENDIX 1 Three Sample Passages from the Babylonian Talmud
- APPENDIX 2 Rabbinic Biographies
- APPENDIX 3 The Sabbath
- Glossary
- Chronology
- Notes
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
APPENDIX 2 - Rabbinic Biographies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations and References
- A Note of Introduction
- 1 The Prehistory of Judaism
- 2 The Beginnings of Monotheism
- 3 The Book and the People
- 4 Crisis and a New Beginning
- 5 The First Kingdom of Judaea
- 6 Diaspora and Homeland
- 7 A Century of Disasters
- 8 The Rebirth of Judaism
- 9 The Rabbis and Their Torah
- 10 The End of Ancient History
- APPENDIX 1 Three Sample Passages from the Babylonian Talmud
- APPENDIX 2 Rabbinic Biographies
- APPENDIX 3 The Sabbath
- Glossary
- Chronology
- Notes
- Suggestions for Further Reading
- Index
Summary
the following sketches do not offer biography in the usual sense of the term, because they cannot be grounded in careful analysis of available source material. Rabbinic literature cannot easily be used for biography for the same reason that biblical narratives cannot easily be used as sources of history (see Chapter 1). Like biblical narratives, the stories provided in rabbinic literature receive no corroboration from any other body of material. They can be read as distillations of rabbinic memory, that is, as stories about distinguished predecessors that later rabbis preserved and told. But they must be read as stories, not archival records of historical incidents. Stories change in the retelling. Stories are preserved because later narrators find them interesting or useful or valuable, but later narrators' interests and values affect the way they are told. Surely there is historical information lurking in these narratives, but that information may less concern the people described in the stories than the later narrators who preserved them, and modern readers will not always be able to trace the path that led from the former to the latter. All this, as noted, can be said about the narratives of scripture as well.
However, with rabbinic narrative a further complication arises as well: very often different rabbinic documents, or even different passages in the same document, contain parallel versions of a single story, versions that may differ in numerous significant details or even in the basic presentation of the episode they appear to describe.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Origins of JudaismFrom Canaan to the Rise of Islam, pp. 210 - 219Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007