Volume 2

Sifra

by Roger Brooks and Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1985

Book 2


Volume 2

Sifre to Deuteronomy

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1987

Volume III

Genesis Rabbah

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1985
Genesis Rabbah is the commentary on the book of Genesis produced by the Rabbinic sages of the fourth and fifth centuries C.E. It provides the Judaic reading of the book of Genesis in light of historical events of that critical period, when the Roman Emperor, Constantine, legalized Christianity.

The Talmud of Babylonia

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1984






From Mishnah to Scripture

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1984

Reading and Believing

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1986

Comparative Midrash

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 January 1986
The documentary hypothesis of the Rabbinic canon of late antiquity maintains that complete documents form the smallest whole building blocks of the Rabbinic system. These two volumes undertake a concrete exercise in the realization of the documentary hypothesis. It compares the rhetorical/formal and exegetical traits of two entire, kindred documents. Then, through a side by side chart, it compares each component of the two documents' treatment of the same extended segment of Scripture, Numbers 19. Whole documents are to be described and analyzed through a process of systematic description, comparison, and contrast. What makes the study fresh is that the author compares the two documents of the rabbinic canon that are most alike-the two Sifres on Numbers. What makes it surprising is the result: they have nothing in common. Each is autonomous, and except for the scriptural foundation systematically shared by both, neither intersects in an appreciable measure with the other. Volume One (Chapters One and Two) deals with forms. In Chapter One, the author surveys the forms of Sifre to Numbers and identifies and classifies the formal patterns that govern throughout. Then, with the formal and propositional program of Sifre to Numbers as a base, in Chapter Two he does the same with Sifre Zutta to Numbers. Volume Two (Chapters Three through Five) deals with exegesis and systematic comparison of whole segments of documents. Chapters Three and Four describe and compare the exegetical patterns of the base-documents, with special reference to the utilization of the verses of Scripture as foci of coherent discourse. In Chapter Five, the author compares the treatment of Huqqat, that is, a single passage of Scripture read by the two commentaries respectively.


The Memorized Torah

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 March 1985


Ancient Judaism

by Jacob Neusner

Published 1 March 1985