Chapters on Jewish literature
These twenty-five short chapters on Jewish Literature open with the fall of Jerusalem in the year 70 of the current era, and end with the death of Moses Mendelssohn in 1786. Thus the period covered extends over more than seventeen centuries. Yet, long as this period is, it is too brief. To do justice to the literature of Judaism even in outline, it is clearly necessary to include the Bible, the Apocrypha, and the writings of Alexandrian Jews, such as Philo. Only by such an inclusion can the genius of the Hebrew people be traced from its early manifestations through its inspired prime to its brilliant after-glow in the centuries with which this little volume deals.
One special reason has induced me to limit this book to the scope indicated above. The Bible has been treated in England and America in a variety of excellent text-books written by and for Jews and Jewesses. It seemed to me very doubtful whether the time is, or ever will be, ripe for dealing with the Scriptures from the purely literary stand-point in teaching young students. But this is the stand-point of this volume. Thus I have refrained from including the Bible, because, on the one hand, I felt that I could not deal with it as I have tried to deal with the rest of Hebrew literature, and because, on the other hand, there was no necessity for me to attempt to add to the books already in use. The sections to which I have restricted myself are only rarely taught to young students in a consecutive manner, except in so far as they fall within the range of lessons on Jewish History. It was strongly urged on me by a friend of great experience and knowledge, that a small text-book on later Jewish Literature was likely to be found useful both for home and school use. Such a book might encourage the elementary study of Jewish literature in a wider circle than has hitherto been reached. Hence this book has been compiled with the definite aim of providing an elementary manual. It will be seen that both in the inclusions and exclusions the author has followed a line of his own, but he lays no claim to originality. The book is simply designed as a manual for those who may wish to master some of the leading characteristics of the subject, without burdening themselves with too many details and dates.
Israel Abrahams
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COPYRIGHT, 1899,
PREFACE
CONTENTS
THE "VINEYARD" AT JAMNIA
CHAPTER II
FLAVIUS JOSEPHUS AND THE JEWISH SIBYL
CHAPTER III
THE TALMUD
CHAPTER IV
THE MIDRASH AND ITS POETRY
CHAPTER V
THE LETTERS OF THE GAONIM
CHAPTER VI
THE KARAITIC LITERATURE
CHAPTER VII
THE NEW-HEBREW PIYUT
CHAPTER VIII
SAADIAH OF FAYUM
CHAPTER IX
DAWN OF THE SPANISH ERA
CHAPTER X
THE SPANISH-JEWISH POETS (I)
CHAPTER XI
RASHI AND ALFASSI
CHAPTER XII
THE SPANISH-JEWISH POETS (II)
CHAPTER XIII
MOSES MAIMONIDES
CHAPTER XIV
THE DIFFUSION OF SCIENCE
CHAPTER XV
THE DIFFUSION OF FOLK-TALES
CHAPTER XVI
MOSES NACHMANIDES
CHAPTER XVII
THE ZOHAR AND LATER MYSTICISM
CHAPTER XVIII
ITALIAN JEWISH POETRY
CHAPTER XIX
ETHICAL LITERATURE
CHAPTER XX
TRAVELLERS' TALES
CHAPTER XXI
HISTORIANS AND CHRONICLERS
CHAPTER XXII
ISAAC ABARBANEL
CHAPTER XXIII
THE SHULCHAN ARUCH
CHAPTER XXIV
AMSTERDAM IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER XXV
MOSES MENDELSSOHN
INDEX