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Zakhor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory (The Samuel and Althea Stroum Lectures in Jewish Studies)
M**Z
Thoughtful and interesting, but also self-limiting
The author writes, and writes very lucidly, about the biblical injunction to remember. But he does not mention at all that the bible, or its authors, also attached an injunction to forget. Namely, to forget who they, they authors, were, when, where and why they wrote the HB, and in what language, and what of it is pure invention (namely, practically all of it). Judaism is not a religion or ideology of remembrance; it is a religion or ideology of remembrance/forgetting. One cannot do without other.The book came out in 1982--before the "new historians," before the Copenhagen School--and perhaps it was still possible at that time to write about the "remembrance" aspect alone. Since at least the mid-90s this is no longer possible, so the question may be asked, why the publisher in 1996 re-issued this book. It is a child of its time, and times have changed."Is all of Jewish history 'Jewish'," asks the author. Answer: it it mostly Greek. At least the history of Scripture is.
J**E
Great Book!
During this COVID quarantine social distancing, I have found a number of new resources. One is the Sabbath teachings from the synagogue in our neighborhood. I heard a message from Deuteronomy the other day and the Rabbi mentioned this book. I'm reading it devotionally. What a blessing! The nature of memory and history. Jewish memory in its historic context. Wow!
J**N
Frame altering perspective
This is the best book I have read all year for putting into perspective the seemingly chaotic confusion of our present state. Today billions have access to each other’s words, images, emotional reactions and thoughts — making visible the multiple realities existing outside any common frame. This book by examining the different functions of history and collective memory over the millennia, ends on a hopeful note, that out of the multitudes can emerge a common sense of our collective selves.
F**D
Tough Read But Well Worth The Effort
This book is not easy reading to be sure. However, it was worth slugging away at it all the way to its conclusion. It provides some explanations for why the Jewish People have until recently notreally sensed a need for legimate historiography. The final section concerning "remembering vs. forgetting", has lessons for Humanity at large.
A**R
A real classic
In the 30 years since Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi published his poignant and profound insight into the tension between history and sacred memory, it's hard to think of a more influential work by a Jewish historian. Or of one which so readily merits a re-reading by those who remember the impact it first made. As for those who aren't familiar with it, give yourself an intellectual treat-- a short study but one which --no pun intended-- you won't forget.
V**I
Zakhor: can we truly remember our past?
The book is fascinating and arrived exactly as described. Love Hippo Books; have bought from them many times—-always totally satisfied !
E**U
Beautiful mind
One of the most influential Jewish books of the 20th century, by a beautiful writer and thinker.
C**S
Brilliant author needs to bring forth his brilliant concepts for the average person to readily understand.
Complex discussions regarding Jewish History and Jewish memory. Not an easy read, but the author is well informed, with interesting and unique ideas. I would have preferred his writing style and his specific ideas to be more "reader friendly" and easier to grasp.
B**N
Worth a read
Heavy going but worth it.
C**A
sehr gute Bewertung
Ich bin sehr zufrieden mit der Bestellung, alles hat reibungslos funktioniert. Das Produkt war wie geschildert und ist pünktlich bei mir angekommen.
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