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The Poetic and Ideological Blurring of Boundaries in the Jewish Book of Ethics Orḥot Ṣaddiqim

  • Vered Tohar

Abstract

This chapter emerges out of dozens of medieval folktales that were included in Jewish pre-modern non-fiction morality essays. The combination of literary folkloristic material and non-fiction moral homilies creates a unique blend of the secular and the sacred. The two may subvert one another, but they also support each other in building a multi-dimensional piece of literature. I suggest a methodological contribution: reading Jewish moral pre-modern literature as a manifestation of four textual dimensions: genre, function, poetic, and rhetoric. Those dimensions enable the literary interpretation and offer an explanation for the acceptance and preservation of those texts through the last 400 years of Jewish culture.

Abstract

This chapter emerges out of dozens of medieval folktales that were included in Jewish pre-modern non-fiction morality essays. The combination of literary folkloristic material and non-fiction moral homilies creates a unique blend of the secular and the sacred. The two may subvert one another, but they also support each other in building a multi-dimensional piece of literature. I suggest a methodological contribution: reading Jewish moral pre-modern literature as a manifestation of four textual dimensions: genre, function, poetic, and rhetoric. Those dimensions enable the literary interpretation and offer an explanation for the acceptance and preservation of those texts through the last 400 years of Jewish culture.

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