Peshat and Derash: Plain and Applied Meaning in Rabbinic Exegesis

Couverture
Oxford University Press, 1991 - 249 pages
From the days of Plato, the problem of the efficacy and adequacy of the written word as a vehicle of human communication has challenged mankind, yet the mystery of how best to achieve clarity and exactitude of written expression has never been solved. The most repercussive instance of this universal problem has been the exegesis of the law embodied in Hebrew scripture. Peshat and Derash is the first book to trace the Jewish interpretative enterprise from a historical perspective. Applying his vast knowledge of Rabbinic materials to the long history of Jewish exegesis of both Bible and Talmud, Halivni investigates the tension that has often existed between the plain sense of the divine text (peshat) and its creative, Rabbinic interpretations (derash). Halivni addresses the theological implications of the deviation of derash from peshat and explores the differences between the ideological extreme of the religious right, which denies that Judaism has a history, and the religious left, which claims that history is all that Judaism has. A comprehensive and critical narration of the history and repercussions of Rabbinic exegesis, this analysis will interest students of legal texts, hermeneutics, and scriptural traditions, as well as anyone involved in Jewish studies.
 

Table des matières

II
3
III
7
IV
16
VI
20
VII
23
VIII
35
IX
44
X
46
XXIII
126
XXV
128
XXVI
132
XXVII
135
XXVIII
136
XXIX
138
XXX
146
XXXI
148

XI
49
XII
50
XIII
52
XIV
53
XV
79
XVI
89
XVII
101
XVIII
105
XIX
108
XX
111
XXI
119
XXII
120
XXXII
149
XXXIII
153
XXXIV
155
XXXV
158
XXXVI
163
XXXVIII
168
XXXIX
175
XL
231
XLI
237
XLII
243
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