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Stories of the Law Narrative Discourse and the Construction of Authority in the Mishnah

By Moshe Simon-Shoshan
Oxford University Press USA May 2012

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780199773732
Publisher
Oxford University Press USA
Publication
May 2012
Format
Hardback , 304 pages
Jurisdiction
U.S. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • A new examination of Rabbinic narrative and law
  • Challenges conventional notions about the place of stories in rabbinic literature
  • Innovative study of the Mishnah as an ideological text

Moshe Simon-Shoshan offers a groundbreaking study of Jewish law (halakhah) and rabbinic story-telling. Focusing on the Mishnah, the foundational text of halakhah, he argues that narrative was essential in early rabbinic formulations and concepts of law, legal process, and political and religious authority.

Simon-Shoshan first sets out a theoretical framework for considering the role of narrative in the Mishnah. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines, including narrative theory, Semitic linguistics, and comparative legal studies, he argues that law and narrative are inextricably intertwined in the Mishnah. Narrative is central to the way in which the Mishnah transmits law and ideas about jurisprudence. Furthermore, the Mishnah's stories are the locus around which the authority of the rabbis as supreme arbiters of Jewish law is both constructed and critiqued. 

In the second half of the book, Simon-Shoshan applies these ideas to close readings of individual Mishnaic stories. Among these stories are some of the most famous narratives in rabbinic literature, including those of Honi the Circle-drawer and R. Gamliel's Yom Kippur confrontation with R. Joshua. In each instance, Simon-Shoshan elucidates the legal, political, theological, and human elements of the story and places them in the wider context of the book's arguments about law, narrative, and rabbinic authority.

Stories of the Law presents an original and forceful argument for applying literary theory to legal texts, challenging the traditional distinctions between law and literature that underlie much contemporary scholarship.

Readership: Scholars of Rabbinic literature and Jewish studies, narrative theory, law

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface for Non-Specialists in Rabbinic Literature
Notes on Texts, Translations and Transcriptions
Part I Narrativity in the Mishnah
1. Introduction
2. Stories, Narratives and Narrativity
3. A Typology of Mishnaic Forms
4. Mishnaic Topography
5. The Mishnah in Comparative Context
Part II The Mishnaic Story
6. Transmission, Redaction and Rhetoric
7. Exempla: Who is a Rabbi?
8. Case Stories: Repetition and Renewal
9. Etiological Stories: Original Nightmares
10. Conclusion
Appendix: List of Stories in the Mishnah
Notes
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Moshe Simon-Shoshan, Adjunct Lecturer, Rothberg School for Overseas Students, Hebrew University, Israel

Adjunct Lecturer, Rothberg School for Overseas Students, Hebrew University

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