Skip to product information
1 of 1

What is Good, and What God Demands

Publisher:

Regular price $183.00
Regular price $183.00 Sale price $183.00
Sold out
The normative rhetoric of tannaitic literature (the earliest extant corpus of rabbinic Judaism) is predominantly deontological. Prior scholarship on rabbinic supererogation, and on points of conta...
Read More
  • 24 September 2010
View Product Details
The normative rhetoric of tannaitic literature (the earliest extant corpus of rabbinic Judaism) is predominantly deontological. Prior scholarship on rabbinic supererogation, and on points of contact with Greco-Roman virtue discourse, has identified non-deontological aspects of tannaitic normativity. However, these two frameworks overlook precisely the productive intersection of deontological with non-deontological, the first because supererogation defines itself against obligation, and the second because the Greco-Roman comparate discourages serious treatment of law-like elements. This book addresses ways in which alternative normative forms entwine with the core deontological rhetoric of tannaitic literature. This perspective exposes, inter alia, echoes of the post-biblical wisdom tradition in tannaitic law, the rich polyvalence of the category mitzvah, and telling differences between the schools of Akiva and Ishmael.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $183.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism
Publication Date: 24 September 2010
ISBN: 9789004187580
Format: Other
REVIEWS Icon
Tzvi Novick, Ph.D. (2008) in Religious Studies, Yale University, occupies the Jordan Kapson Chair in Jewish Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He has published on a wide variety of topics in rabbinic and Second Temple literature.