Execution and Invention : Death Penalty Discourse in Early Rabbinic and Christian Cultures
Execution and Invention : Death Penalty Discourse in Early Rabbinic and Christian Cultures
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Author(s): Berkowitz, Beth A.
ISBN No.: 9780195179194
Pages: 362
Year: 200603
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 200.10
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"This is a splendid project. It is conceived brilliantly to be at the solid cutting edge of rabbinic scholarship. Berkowitz looks at the discourse of the death penalty as a discourse of power, as a way of asserting rabbinic authority, or even of constructing rabbinism itself, over-against its rivals. She goes on to integrate, apply, and interrogate the latest theoretical perspectives on culture and power, from Foucault through postcolonial theory and to ritualtheory in a remarkably effective way and simply elucidates issues in a way that has not been done before. We are dealing here with a project that goes far beyond its case study and threatens to illumine the history of Judaism in unprecedented ways."--Daniel Boyarin, author of Border Lines: ThePartition of Judaeo-Christianity"How a society treats the criminal in its midst can tell us a great deal about that society''s ideas of justice, violence, legal authority, and social order. When a society applies the harshest of penalties -- capital punishment -- inevitably, these ideas are amplified and put to the test. Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention explores how the early rabbis theorized capital punishment, arguing that the ritual of execution preserved in the Talmudserved primarily to promote a particular vision of rabbinic authority and to distinguish that authority from the dominant political and legal authorities of the time.


This book brilliantly integrates close textual analysis, theories of ritual, and the reception history of late ancient rabbinic codifications ofsocially sanctioned violence.--Elizabeth A. Castelli, author of Martyrdom and Memory: Early Christian Culture Making"Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention is a highly engaging and persuasive study of the rabbis'' views on the death penalty. Although they had no power to impose it, their reflections on the subject are revealing for issues of law, ethics and social identity. Also included are studies of early Christian views on execution. Berkowitz deftly brings out both the common roots of rabbinic and early Christian views on this subject, as well as the dramaticways in which they differ. I recommend this book enthusiastically to students and scholars alike."--Adela Yarbro Collins, author of The Beginning of the Gospel: Probings of Mark in Context"Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention is a masterful study of discourses concerning the death penalty in early Christianity and, in particular, Rabbinic Judaism.


Her readings throughout are extremely strong, avoiding the apologetics that characterized so much earlier writing on this subject. Drawing upon a variety of disciplines to sharpen her critical focus, Berkowitz is especially impressive in her interpretations of the ritual of execution asdescribed in the Mishnah and related traditions. Execution and Invention is a pleasure to read, and it should serve as the standard reference for this topic for years to come."--David Kraemer, author of The Meanings of Death in Rabbinic Judaism"This is a splendid project. It is conceived brilliantly to be at the solid cutting edge of rabbinic scholarship. Berkowitz looks at the discourse of the death penalty as a discourse of power, as a way of asserting rabbinic authority, or even of constructing rabbinism itself, over-against its rivals. She goes on to integrate, apply, and interrogate the latest theoretical perspectives on culture and power, from Foucault through postcolonial theory and to ritualtheory in a remarkably effective way and simply elucidates issues in a way that has not been done before. We are dealing here with a project that goes far beyond its case study and threatens to illumine the history of Judaism in unprecedented ways.


"--Daniel Boyarin, author of Border Lines: ThePartition of Judaeo-Christianity"How a society treats the criminal in its midst can tell us a great deal about that society''s ideas of justice, violence, legal authority, and social order. When a society applies the harshest of penalties -- capital punishment -- inevitably, these ideas are amplified and put to the test. Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention explores how the early rabbis theorized capital punishment, arguing that the ritual of execution preserved in the Talmudserved primarily to promote a particular vision of rabbinic authority and to distinguish that authority from the dominant political and legal authorities of the time. This book brilliantly integrates close textual analysis, theories of ritual, and the reception history of late ancient rabbinic codifications ofsocially sanctioned violence.--Elizabeth A. Castelli, author of Martyrdom and Memory: Early Christian Culture Making"Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention is a highly engaging and persuasive study of the rabbis'' views on the death penalty. Although they had no power to impose it, their reflections on the subject are revealing for issues of law, ethics and social identity. Also included are studies of early Christian views on execution.


Berkowitz deftly brings out both the common roots of rabbinic and early Christian views on this subject, as well as the dramaticways in which they differ. I recommend this book enthusiastically to students and scholars alike."--Adela Yarbro Collins, author of The Beginning of the Gospel: Probings of Mark in Context"Beth Berkowitz''s Execution and Invention is a masterful study of discourses concerning the death penalty in early Christianity and, in particular, Rabbinic Judaism. Her readings throughout are extremely strong, avoiding the apologetics that characterized so much earlier writing on this subject. Drawing upon a variety of disciplines to sharpen her critical focus, Berkowitz is especially impressive in her interpretations of the ritual of execution asdescribed in the Mishnah and related traditions. Execution and Invention is a pleasure to read, and it should serve as the standard reference for this topic for years to come."--David Kraemer, author of The Meanings of Death in Rabbinic Judaism.


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