Abraham: The First Jew: Jewish Lives
Autor Anthony Juliusen Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 feb 2025
In this new biography of Abraham, Judaism’s foundational figure, Anthony Julius offers an account of the origins of a fundamental struggle within Judaism between skepticism and faith, critique and affirmation, thinking for oneself and thinking under the direction of another. Julius describes Abraham’s life as two separate lives, and as a version of the collective life of the Jewish people.
Abraham’s first life is an early adulthood of questioning the polytheism of his home city of Ur Kasdim until its ruler, Nimrod, condemns him to death and he is rescued, he believes, by a miracle. In his second life, Abraham’s focus is no longer on critique but rather on conversion and on his leadership over his growing household, until God’s command that he sacrifice his son Isaac. This test, the Akedah (or “Binding”), ends with another miracle, as he believes, but as Julius argues, it is also a catastrophe for Abraham. The Akedah represents for him an unsurpassed horizon—and in Jewish life thereafter. This book focuses on Abraham as leader of the first Jewish project, Judaism, and the unresolvable, insurmountable crisis that the Akedah represents—both in his leadership and in Judaism itself.
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback (1) | 151.58 lei Precomandă | |
| Yale University Press – 12 mai 2026 | 151.58 lei Precomandă | |
| Hardback (1) | 145.57 lei 3-5 săpt. | +25.37 lei 7-13 zile |
| Yale University Press – 11 feb 2025 | 145.57 lei 3-5 săpt. | +25.37 lei 7-13 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780300266801
ISBN-10: 0300266804
Pagini: 392
Ilustrații: 1 b-w illus.
Dimensiuni: 146 x 210 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Yale University Press
Colecția Yale University Press
Seria Jewish Lives
ISBN-10: 0300266804
Pagini: 392
Ilustrații: 1 b-w illus.
Dimensiuni: 146 x 210 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Yale University Press
Colecția Yale University Press
Seria Jewish Lives
Recenzii
“With his extraordinary new book, Abraham: The First Jew, the British jurist and historian Anthony Julius provides a new dualistic taxonomy that deserves to find its way into scholarship and biblical discourse.”—David Wolpe, Commentary
“A bold new biography.”—Simon Rocker, Jewish Chronicle
“Julius has written an important and original book. In just 392 pages, he has offered us a profound intellectual exploration of the forces that are shaping Jewish identity in our age.”—Alan Bekhor, TheArticle
“The rewards of this book are considerable; one’s interest never flags as Julius draws on his remarkable knowledge. . . . This book is characterised by an authorial sensitivity to the pain of the human heart.”—Ann Sarzin, Jwire
“Julius . . . has written a formally inventive overview of Judaism’s founder including novelistic scenes, debates and multi-pronged considerations of the story’s key events. . . . It is a text rich in allusions to philosophers, Romantic poets and midrash, capturing the existential dilemmas central to Jewish life and prefigured by our ancestor.”—PJ Grisar, Forward
“Julius’s story . . . tells us what Jews have made of Abraham. That assignment is an ample one, and Julius displays a critical intellect that is up to the task.”—Robert Siegel, Moment
“A bold book and an important one.”—Stephen Spector, Review of Biblical Literature
“This brilliantly original and often deeply moving book tells the story of Abraham so as to set out a narrative of ‘faith’ itself—the relation of faith to reason, the abiding tension between claimed conviction and inescapable or tragic questioning, the way in which, like Abraham, we may be both ‘residents’ and ‘aliens’ in the world of discourse about God. A unique and searching masterpiece.”—Rowan Williams, theologian and poet, University of Cambridge
“Anthony Julius’s Abraham is beautifully written, provocative, and wise.”—Martha C. Nussbaum, University of Chicago
“Fascinating and profound, scholarly and playful, philosophical and aesthetic, Anthony Julius’s Abraham is an original and compelling hybrid that brings Abraham to life and through him discusses the nature of faith and his own personal philosophy.”—Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Jerusalem: The Biography
“Learned, rich in revelation, beautifully articulated and researched. In an age when the phrase ‘the Abrahamic religions’ is tossed about with ease, it is more than fascinating to follow Anthony Julius’s meditations on the man himself.”—Stephen Fry, author of Mythos
“A bold new biography.”—Simon Rocker, Jewish Chronicle
“Julius has written an important and original book. In just 392 pages, he has offered us a profound intellectual exploration of the forces that are shaping Jewish identity in our age.”—Alan Bekhor, TheArticle
“The rewards of this book are considerable; one’s interest never flags as Julius draws on his remarkable knowledge. . . . This book is characterised by an authorial sensitivity to the pain of the human heart.”—Ann Sarzin, Jwire
“Julius . . . has written a formally inventive overview of Judaism’s founder including novelistic scenes, debates and multi-pronged considerations of the story’s key events. . . . It is a text rich in allusions to philosophers, Romantic poets and midrash, capturing the existential dilemmas central to Jewish life and prefigured by our ancestor.”—PJ Grisar, Forward
“Julius’s story . . . tells us what Jews have made of Abraham. That assignment is an ample one, and Julius displays a critical intellect that is up to the task.”—Robert Siegel, Moment
“A bold book and an important one.”—Stephen Spector, Review of Biblical Literature
“This brilliantly original and often deeply moving book tells the story of Abraham so as to set out a narrative of ‘faith’ itself—the relation of faith to reason, the abiding tension between claimed conviction and inescapable or tragic questioning, the way in which, like Abraham, we may be both ‘residents’ and ‘aliens’ in the world of discourse about God. A unique and searching masterpiece.”—Rowan Williams, theologian and poet, University of Cambridge
“Anthony Julius’s Abraham is beautifully written, provocative, and wise.”—Martha C. Nussbaum, University of Chicago
“Fascinating and profound, scholarly and playful, philosophical and aesthetic, Anthony Julius’s Abraham is an original and compelling hybrid that brings Abraham to life and through him discusses the nature of faith and his own personal philosophy.”—Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Jerusalem: The Biography
“Learned, rich in revelation, beautifully articulated and researched. In an age when the phrase ‘the Abrahamic religions’ is tossed about with ease, it is more than fascinating to follow Anthony Julius’s meditations on the man himself.”—Stephen Fry, author of Mythos
Notă biografică
Anthony Julius is deputy chairman of the international law firm Mishcon de Reya and a professor in the Faculty of Laws, University College London. He is the author of T. S. Eliot, Anti-Semitism and Literary Form, among other books. He lives in London, UK.