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Is “The Talmud” a Document?

  • Robert G. Goldenberg
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© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston, Genthiner Straße 13, 10785 Berlin

© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston, Genthiner Straße 13, 10785 Berlin

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Transliteration Table for Hebrew and Aramaic VII
  4. Preface 1
  5. Appreciations of Robert Goldenberg and his Scholarly Work
  6. Robert Goldenberg: An Appreciation with a Biographical Sketch 5
  7. Robert G. Goldenberg as a Scholar of Ancient Judaism 11
  8. The Torah of Bob Goldenberg 15
  9. Robert Goldenberg: In Appreciation 19
  10. Bob Goldenberg: A Kind and Compassionate Scholar 21
  11. Bob Goldenberg (1942‒2021): Friend and Colleague 25
  12. Bibliography of the Writings of Robert G. Goldenberg 29
  13. List of Contributors 37
  14. List of Abbreviations 39
  15. Collected Studies of Robert G. Goldenberg
  16. The Problem of False Prophecy: Talmudic Interpretations of Jeremiah 28 and 1 Kings 22 43
  17. Hebrew Scriptures in Early Post-Biblical Judaism, with Special Reference to the Rabbinic Tradition 61
  18. The Septuagint Ban on Cursing the Gods 69
  19. How Did Ruth Become the Model Convert? 77
  20. Why Should the Look-Alikes Be a Problem? 85
  21. Section II: Studies in Rabbinic Literature
  22. David Weiss Halivni, Meqorot Umesorot, 1. Ketuvot 95
  23. The Deposition of Rabban Gamaliel II: An Examination of the Sources 111
  24. Commandment and Consciousness in Talmudic Thought 139
  25. History and Ideology in Talmudic Narrative 149
  26. The Problem of Originality in Talmudic Thought 161
  27. Did the Amoraim See Christianity as Something New? 169
  28. Is “The Talmud” a Document? 179
  29. Mishnah 187
  30. Section III: Judaism in Late Antiquity
  31. The Jewish Sabbath in the Roman World up to the Time of Constantine the Great 197
  32. Law and Spirit in Talmudic Religion 235
  33. The Place of Other Religions in Ancient Jewish Thought, with Particular Reference to Early Rabbinic Judaism 257
  34. Is There an “Essence of Judaism” After All? 275
  35. The Place of the Sabbath in Rabbinic Judaism 283
  36. Bound Up in the Bond of Life: Death and Afterlife in the Jewish Tradition 297
  37. Religious Formation in Ancient Judaism 311
  38. Section IV: History of the Jewish People in Antiquity
  39. The Broken Axis: Rabbinic Judaism and the Fall of Jerusalem 333
  40. The Destruction of The Jerusalem Temple: Its Meaning and Its Consequences 343
  41. On the Origins of Anti-Semitism and the Problem of Blaming the Victim 359
  42. Index of Ancient and Medieval Sources
  43. Index of Modern Authors
  44. Subject Index
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