Kosman Gender and Dialogue in the Rabbinic Prism
1. Auflage 2012
ISBN: 978-3-11-021864-0
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
E-Book, Englisch, 275 Seiten
Reihe: ISSN
ISBN: 978-3-11-021864-0
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
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AAcademics, Libraries, Institutes
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Weitere Infos & Material
1;In Place of an Introduction: On Gender Issues and Their Possible Significance for Understanding the Spiritual World of the Rabbis;9
1.1;“Masculinity” and “Femininity” in the Psychosexual Theory of Freud and Nancy Chodorow;9
1.2;Lacan’s Interpretation of the Freudian Theory;13
1.3;The Drawbacks of the Freudian Approach;15
1.4;Sara Ruddick and the Care Experience;18
1.5;Between Freud and Buber: Between Psychoanalysis and Dialogue;19
1.6;A Note on the Relationship between “I-Thou” and Halakhah and “Law”;26
1.7;Phallicism, Humility, and the Tension between “Masculinity” and “Femininity” in the Aggadic Narratives;28
1.8;The Chapters of the Book;33
2;Chapter One. The Woman’s Spiritual Place in the Talmudic Story: A Reading of the Narrative of Mar Ukba and His Wife;37
2.1;An Introduction to the Discussion of the Narrative;37
2.2;The Text of the Narrative;39
2.3;The Reading of the Narrative;42
2.4;Why Was Mar Ukba Insulted?;47
2.5;The Leitmotiv of the Heel;53
2.6;On the Feminine and Masculine Associations in the Narrative;55
3;Chapter Two. Rabbi Akiva and the Daughter of Ben Kalba Savua: On the Conception of Love in the Spiritual World of the Talmudic Story;64
3.1;The Narrative of Akiva and His Mate, according to the Version of Ketubot 62b-63a;64
3.2;The Versions of the Narrative;66
3.3;The Love of Akiva and His Mate;71
3.4;Structure of the Narrative;76
3.5;The Waves of Opposition and Their Significance;77
3.6;Inner and Outer;85
3.7;Stability and Mobility;89
3.8;Is This a Romantic Love Story?;91
3.9;Against Boyarin’s Political Reading;97
3.10;Appendix A: On the Nature of Relationship between Akiva and His Mate in the Later Versions;102
3.11;Appendix B: On the Character of Ben Kalba Savua in the Later Versions;110
3.12;Appendix C: On the Character of “That Old Man” in the Later Versions;114
3.13;Appendix D: On the Conversation with the Women Neighbors in the Later Versions;115
4;Chapter 3. “Internal Homeland” and “External Homeland”: A Literary and Psychoanalytical Study of the Narrative of R. Assi and His Aged Mother;117
4.1;The Complex Relationship between Halakhah and Aggadah, as Background to a Reading of the Narrative;117
4.2;The Text of the Narrative;119
4.3;A Proposed Psychoanalytical Reading;130
4.4;On the Transformation of the Text from the Land of Israel to Babylonia;134
5;Chapter 4. The Female Breast and the Mouth Opened in Prayer;141
5.1;The Narrative of the Intervention by the Mother of R. Ahadboi in the Study Hall Quarrel;141
5.2;A Discussion of the Elements of the Narrative;147
5.3;Baring One’s Breasts as an Act of Protest;151
5.4;Baring One’s Breast as a Spiritual Expression;154
5.5;Baring One’s Breasts as an Act of Entreaty;157
5.6;Exposing One’s Breasts in the Midrashic Picture: A Gesture of Love and Giving;158
6;Chapter Five. A Reading of the Creation Narrative: Femininity and Masculinity in the Prism of the Bible and the Midrash;162
6.1;The Mythological Background and Gender Aspects;163
6.2;In the Beginning God Created;173
6.3;Creation Ex Nihilo or Ex Materia?;179
6.4;The Midrashic Sources, and Their Relation to the Proposed Dialogic Reading;185
6.5;On Building God’s Palace in the Garbage in Gen. Rabbah;187
6.6;On the End of the Creation Passage: The Elements of the Sabbath and Sanctity;193
6.7;Buber’s Comments on the Creation Passage;200
6.8;The Gender Significance of the Moderation in the Biblical Portrayal;202
6.9;The Dialogic Significance of the Creation Episode: Love as a Procreative and Creative Force;213
7;Afterword;222
8;Bibliography;223