Book
Beguiling Guidance
Zechariah Alḍāhirī’s Sefer Hamusar, a Hebrew Maqāma from 16th-Century Yemen
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Adena Tanenbaum
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2025
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About this book
The only Hebrew picaresque maqāma from Yemen, Sefer hamusar captivates its readers with trickster tales of wandering and adventure while offering moral guidance and a spiritual ascent via kabbalistic study. In Beguiling Guidance, Adena Tanenbaum explores these tensions, along with the literary, social-historical, philosophical, and kabbalistic aspects of Sefer hamusar, and situates the work in its broader 16th-century framework. Applying a fresh reading, she analyzes Alḍāhirī’s maqāma as a rich repository of intellectual history; treats his travel narratives as composites of fiction and fact; and uncovers the cultural assumptions and self-definitions underlying his representations of Muslims, which she shows to be far more variegated and nuanced than previously acknowledged. Beguiling Guidance should appeal to readers interested in transregional cultural exchange and the diffusion of texts; pre-modern fiction and travel writing; and Muslim-Jewish power relations in the late medieval/early modern Middle East. It also serves as an introduction to the vibrant culture of a Jewish community that traced its presence in South Arabia back to antiquity.
Author / Editor information
Adena Tanenbaum, Ph.D. (1993), Harvard, is an Associate Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at the Ohio State University. Author of The Contemplative Soul: Hebrew Poetry and Philosophical Theory in Medieval Spain (Brill, 2002), she works on medieval Hebrew literature and Jewish intellectual history in Islamic lands.
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 22, 2025
eBook ISBN:
9789004733787
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Front matter:
12
Main content:
564
eBook ISBN:
9789004733787
Audience(s) for this book
Scholars/graduate students in Jewish Studies, Islamic Studies, Medieval/ Early Modern Literature, Ottoman Studies, Mediterranean Studies, Indian Ocean Studies. Specialists and non-specialists interested in pre-modern Yemenite Jewry. Academic institutions and libraries.