Strange Fire: Reading the Bible After the HolocaustTod Linafelt NYU Press, 2000 - 304 pagine There can be little doubt that the Holocaust was an event of major consequence for the twentieth century. While there have been innumerable volumes published on the implications of the Holocaust for history, philosophy, and ethics, there has been a surprising lack of attention paid to the theoretical and practical effects of the Shoah on biblical interpretation. |
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Sommario
Notes on Contributors | 9 |
Strange Fires Ancient and Modern | 15 |
A Conversation | 22 |
The Ethical Dimensions of | 36 |
Rabbinic Bible Interpretation after the Holocaust | 52 |
A Fissure Always Uncontained | 62 |
The Hebrew Bible in the Framework of ChristianJewish | 76 |
Biblical Texts Holocaust Testimony | 86 |
Biblical Quotation in | 161 |
a Murderer? Judges 1921 as a Parable | 176 |
Helping the Church Interpret | 192 |
Isaiah and Theodicy after the Shoah | 208 |
Job and Auschwitz | 233 |
Job and PostHolocaust Theodicy | 252 |
The Presentation of Pain in | 267 |
Death as the Beginning of Life in the Book of Ecclesiastes | 280 |
The Shoah and the Biblical Ethics | 106 |
Edmond Jabès and the Question of Death | 121 |
ReReading Avrahams Monologue | 136 |