Eros and the Jews: From Biblical Israel to Contemporary America

Couverture
University of California Press, 3 oct. 1997 - 319 pages
Contradictory stereotypes about Jewish sexuality pervade modern culture, from Lenny Bruce's hip eroticism to Woody Allen's little man with the big libido (and even bigger sexual neurosis). Does Judaism in fact liberate or repress sexual desire? David Biale does much more than answer that question as he traces Judaism's evolving position on sexuality, from the Bible and Talmud to Zionism up through American attitudes today. What he finds is a persistent conflict between asceticism and gratification, between procreation and pleasure.

From the period of the Talmud onward, Biale says, Jewish culture continually struggled with sexual abstinence, attempting to incorporate the virtues of celibacy, as it absorbed them from Greco-Roman and Christian cultures, within a theology of procreation. He explores both the canonical writings of male authorities and the alternative voices of women, drawing from a fascinating range of sources that includes the Book of Ruth, Yiddish literature, the memoirs of the founders of Zionism, and the films of Woody Allen.

Biale's historical reconstruction of Jewish sexuality sees the present through the past and the past through the present. He discovers an erotic tradition that is not dogmatic, but a record of real people struggling with questions that have challenged every human culture, and that have relevance for the dilemmas of both Jews and non-Jews today.
 

Table des matières

Sexual Subversions in the Bible
11
Law and Desire in the Talmud
33
Rabbinic Authority and Popular Culture in Medieval Europe 60
60
Sensuality Asceticism and Medieval Jewish
86
Philosophy 88
88
Sexuality and Spirituality in the Kabbalah
101
The Displacement of Desire in Eighteenth Century Hasidism
121
Eros and Enlightenment
149
Zionism as an Erotic Revolution
176
Sexual Stereotypes in American Jewish Culture
204
Creating Desire
228
NOTES
231
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SELECTED SECONDARY WORKS
295
INDEX
309
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À propos de l'auteur (1997)

David Biale is Koret Professor of Jewish History and Director of the Center for Jewish Studies at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California. He is the author of Gershom Scholem: Kabbalah and Counter-History (1979) and Power and Powerlessness in Jewish History (1986), both of which won the National Jewish Book Award.

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