Beguiling Guidance
Autor Adena Tanenbaumen Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 oct 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004733794
ISBN-10: 9004733795
Pagini: 576
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.98 kg
Editura: Brill
ISBN-10: 9004733795
Pagini: 576
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.98 kg
Editura: Brill
Notă biografică
Adena Tanenbaum, Ph.D. (1993), Harvard, is an Associate Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at the Ohio State University. Author of The Contemplative Soul: Hebrew Poetry and Philosophical Theory in Medieval Spain (Brill, 2002), she works on medieval Hebrew literature and Jewish intellectual history in Islamic lands.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Historical Context
2 Medieval Versus Early Modern
3 Authorial Sensibilities
4 Distinguishing Features of Sefer hamusar
5 Literary Continuities and New Departures
6 Kabbalah and Philosophy
7 Receptivity to Printed Books
8 A Unique Case?
9 Earlier Perspectives on Sefer hamusar
10 Postscript: Sefer hamusar as Auto/biography Manqué?
11 Chapter Outline
1 Literary Dimensions: Maqāma, Musar, Narrative and Poetic Techniques
1 Setting the Scene: Author’s Introduction
2 The Maqāma Genre
3 The Idea of Fiction in Medieval Arabic and Hebrew Literature
4 Sefer hamusar: Structure, Texts, and Paratexts
5 Stylistic and Narrative Techniques
6 The Role of the Formal Poems
2 Travel in Many Guises: Journeys Real and Imagined
1 Reassessing Pre-modern Arabic and Hebrew Travel Narratives
2 Toponyms
3 Reading the Travel Accounts in Sefer hamusar
4 Arabic and Hebrew Antecedents to the Travel Narratives
5 Links between Framing Itineraries and Embedded Tales
6 Symbolic Links: Damascus
7 Thematic and Lexical Links: Ḥaḍramawt
8 Socio-Cultural Relevance: Cochin
9 Stasis and Movement: Writing from Prison
10 Alḍāhirī’s Conception of Space
11 Periphery and Center
12 Stimuli to Travel in Sefer Hamusar
13 Mobility and the Diffusion of Religious Knowledge and Practices
14 Journeying and Questions of Identity
15 The Significance of Place Names
16 Cultural Orbits of the Travel
17 Crossing Boundaries and Depicting Other Jewish Subcultures
18 Other Eastern Jews
19 Ashkenazim
20 Romaniots?
3 A Distinctive Sense of Self: Transregional Contacts with Jews in the Land of Israel
1 Introduction
2 Encounters with the Emissary from the Holy Land
3 Talmud Study in the Land of Israel
4 Ottoman Sephardi Dominance
5 Pronunciation as a Marker of Difference
6 The Impact of Print Culture
4 Representations of Muslims: Perspectives on the Dominant Faith
1 Techniques of Representation
2 Conclusion: Historical and Imaginary Muslims
5 Didacticism or Literary Legerdemain? Philosophy, Ethics, and the Picaresque
1 Philosophical and Medical Conceptions of the Soul: The “Internal Senses”
2 The Soul’s Moral Qualities
3 A Poetic Coda
4 Reliable Transmission?
5 Pietist Pose
6 Medical Imposture and Abstract Cures
7 Sham Preachers and Moral Ambiguities
6 A Conduit for Kabbalah: Belles-Lettres as a Medium for Mysticism
1 The Kabbalistic Chapters
2 Alḍāhirī as a Conduit for Kabbalistic Learning and its Reception in Yemen
3 Alḍāhirī’s Relationship to Lurianic Kabbalah and the Poetry of the Safed Mystics
4 Recurrent Kabbalistic Themes
5 The Interplay between Kabbalistic and Narrative Elements
6 Conclusions
7 The Urge to Be Immortalized: Auto-Epitaphs, Eulogies, and the Afterlife of Sefer hamusar
1 The Conflation of Author and Protagonists
2 The Structural Function of the Epitaphs
3 The Epitaph: Apology or Swan Song?
Bibliography
Indices
Introduction
1 Historical Context
2 Medieval Versus Early Modern
3 Authorial Sensibilities
4 Distinguishing Features of Sefer hamusar
5 Literary Continuities and New Departures
6 Kabbalah and Philosophy
7 Receptivity to Printed Books
8 A Unique Case?
9 Earlier Perspectives on Sefer hamusar
10 Postscript: Sefer hamusar as Auto/biography Manqué?
11 Chapter Outline
1 Literary Dimensions: Maqāma, Musar, Narrative and Poetic Techniques
1 Setting the Scene: Author’s Introduction
2 The Maqāma Genre
3 The Idea of Fiction in Medieval Arabic and Hebrew Literature
4 Sefer hamusar: Structure, Texts, and Paratexts
5 Stylistic and Narrative Techniques
6 The Role of the Formal Poems
2 Travel in Many Guises: Journeys Real and Imagined
1 Reassessing Pre-modern Arabic and Hebrew Travel Narratives
2 Toponyms
3 Reading the Travel Accounts in Sefer hamusar
4 Arabic and Hebrew Antecedents to the Travel Narratives
5 Links between Framing Itineraries and Embedded Tales
6 Symbolic Links: Damascus
7 Thematic and Lexical Links: Ḥaḍramawt
8 Socio-Cultural Relevance: Cochin
9 Stasis and Movement: Writing from Prison
10 Alḍāhirī’s Conception of Space
11 Periphery and Center
12 Stimuli to Travel in Sefer Hamusar
13 Mobility and the Diffusion of Religious Knowledge and Practices
14 Journeying and Questions of Identity
15 The Significance of Place Names
16 Cultural Orbits of the Travel
17 Crossing Boundaries and Depicting Other Jewish Subcultures
18 Other Eastern Jews
19 Ashkenazim
20 Romaniots?
3 A Distinctive Sense of Self: Transregional Contacts with Jews in the Land of Israel
1 Introduction
2 Encounters with the Emissary from the Holy Land
3 Talmud Study in the Land of Israel
4 Ottoman Sephardi Dominance
5 Pronunciation as a Marker of Difference
6 The Impact of Print Culture
4 Representations of Muslims: Perspectives on the Dominant Faith
1 Techniques of Representation
2 Conclusion: Historical and Imaginary Muslims
5 Didacticism or Literary Legerdemain? Philosophy, Ethics, and the Picaresque
1 Philosophical and Medical Conceptions of the Soul: The “Internal Senses”
2 The Soul’s Moral Qualities
3 A Poetic Coda
4 Reliable Transmission?
5 Pietist Pose
6 Medical Imposture and Abstract Cures
7 Sham Preachers and Moral Ambiguities
6 A Conduit for Kabbalah: Belles-Lettres as a Medium for Mysticism
1 The Kabbalistic Chapters
2 Alḍāhirī as a Conduit for Kabbalistic Learning and its Reception in Yemen
3 Alḍāhirī’s Relationship to Lurianic Kabbalah and the Poetry of the Safed Mystics
4 Recurrent Kabbalistic Themes
5 The Interplay between Kabbalistic and Narrative Elements
6 Conclusions
7 The Urge to Be Immortalized: Auto-Epitaphs, Eulogies, and the Afterlife of Sefer hamusar
1 The Conflation of Author and Protagonists
2 The Structural Function of the Epitaphs
3 The Epitaph: Apology or Swan Song?
Bibliography
Indices