Search Books
Tinkering: Consumers Reinve… The Hundred Years War, Volu…

Between Worlds: Dybbuks, Exorcists, and Early Modern Judaism (Jewish Culture and Contexts)

Author J. H. Chajes
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Category History
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
21.48 24.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $18.66

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
Author(s)J. H. Chajes
ISBN / ASIN0812221702
ISBN-139780812221701
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank906,145
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

After a nearly two-thousand-year interlude, and just as Christian Europe was in the throes of the great Witch Hunt and what historians have referred to as "The Age of the Demoniac," accounts of spirit possession began to proliferate in the Jewish world. Concentrated at first in the Near East but spreading rapidly westward, spirit possession, both benevolent and malevolent, emerged as perhaps the most characteristic form of religiosity in early modern Jewish society.

Adopting a comparative historical approach, J. H. Chajes uncovers this strain of Jewish belief to which scant attention has been paid. Informed by recent research in historical anthropology, Between Worlds provides fascinating descriptions of the cases of possession as well as analysis of the magical techniques deployed by rabbinic exorcists to expel the ghostly intruders.

Seeking to understand the phenomenon of spirit possession in its full complexity, Chajes delves into its ideational framework—chiefly the doctrine of reincarnation—while exploring its relation to contemporary Christian and Islamic analogues. Regarding spirit possession as a form of religious expression open to—and even dominated by—women, Chajes initiates a major reassessment of women in the history of Jewish mysticism. In a concluding section he examines the reception history of the great Hebrew accounts of spirit possession, focusing on the deployment of these "ghost stories" in the battle against incipient skepticism in the turbulent Jewish community of seventeenth-century Amsterdam.

Exploring a phenomenon that bridged learned and ignorant, rich and poor, men and women, Jews and Gentiles, Between Worlds maps for the first time a prominent feature of the early modern Jewish religious landscape, as quotidian as it was portentous: the nexus of the living and the dead.

All the King's Men: The Truth Behind SOE's Greatest Wa…
View
India Discovered
View
Who Killed Canadian History?
View
Britain, 1815-1918: A-level (Flagship History)
View
10 Downing Street: The Illustrated History
View
Jane's F-117 Stealth Fighter: At The Controls
View
Jane's Tanks & Combat Vehicles Recognition Guide
View
PEACEKEEPER - the Road to Sarajevo
View
Freedom at Midnight
View