Torah in the Mouth
Writing and Oral Tradition in Palestinian Judaism, 200 BCE - 400 CE
Jaffee, Martin S.,
Samuel and Althea Stroum Professor of Jewish Studies,
University of Washington
Print publication date: 2001
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-514067-5 doi:10.1093/0195140672.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
This book is a study of the relationship of oral tradition to written sources among different Jewish groups that thrived in Palestine from the later Second Temple period into Late Antiquity. Its main concern is to track the emerging awareness, within diverse Palestinian scribal groups, of the distinction between written books and the oral traditions upon which they were based or in light of which they were interpreted. The thesis holds that during the Second Temple period in particular, diverse Jewish scribal communities –such as the composers of Jewish pseudepigrapha, the Dead Sea community, and the Pharisees – certainly employed oral traditions in their literary and interpretive work. But they did not appeal to oral tradition as an authoritative source of knowledge. This was reserved for written books regarded as prophetic transmissions from antiquity. The emergence of a coherent ideology of oral tradition as a kind of revelation comparable to that of Scripture is associated with the consolidation of third century rabbinic Judaism. The book argues that the rabbinic ideology of Oral Torah – “Torah in the Mouth” – is, in great measure, a legitimation of the institution of rabbinic discipleship, which depended upon the primacy of face-to-face relationships, unmediated by the written word.
Keywords: Dead Sea community, discipleship, Late Antiquity, Oral Torah, Oral tradition, Pharisees, pseudepigrapha, rabbinic Judaism, scribal communities, Second Temple Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1.
Social Settings of Literacy and Scribal Orality
2.
Performative Reading and Text Interpretation at Qumran
3.
The Media of Pharisaic Text-Interpretive Tradition
4.
Tannaitic Tradition as an Object of Rabbinic Reflection
5.
The Ideological Construction of Torah in the Mouth
6.
Composing the Tannaitic Oral-Literary Tradition
7.
Torah in the Mouth in Galilean Discipleship Communities
8.
Epilogue
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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