Distributed for Bodleian Library Publishing
Jewish Languages and Book Culture
A fascinating collection examining the spread of books in Jewish vernacular languages and Hebrew characters.
From Cairo Genizah to Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, the spread of books in Jewish vernacular languages and Hebrew characters offers an extraordinary insight into the linguistic richness of Jewish life. For over two millennia, Jewish communities have used languages other than Hebrew for daily oral communication, including Aramaic, Judeo-Arabic, Judeo-French, Judeo-Italian, Yiddish, and Ladino. However, they used the Hebrew alphabet to write these languages down and developed sophisticated systems to transmit texts in them. Many of these vernacular languages also became languages of book culture.
The Bodleian Libraries’ collections host an unparalleled collection of texts in Judeo-languages, giving a picture of how these works were produced and communicated. As some of these languages are now extinct or moribund, these writings are also important testimonies to lost cultures. Generously illustrated and ranging in time from the Middle Ages to the Emancipation, this collection of essays showcases important hallmarks in the intellectual and social history of Jewish culture.
256 pages | 86 color plates | 9.33 x 10.2 | © 2024
Language and Linguistics: Anthropological/Sociological Aspects of Language
Religion: Judaism
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION by Judith Olszowy-Schlanger & César Merchán-Hamann
1. ARAMAIC FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MIDDLE AGES by Hector M. Patmore, Shlomi Efrati & Jeroen Verrijssen
2. KABBALISTIC MEDIEVAL AND POST-MEDIEVAL ARAMAIC BOOKS by Daniel Abrams
3. CLASSICAL JUDEO-ARABIC by Ronny Vollandt
4. TRACING LADINO IN MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN MANUSCRIPTS by Esperanza Alfonso
5. POST-MEDIEVAL LADINO BOOKS AND DOCUMENTS by Katja Šmid
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