List of Illustrations Introduction: Writing a Jewish History of Horror, or What Happens When Monsters Stare Back, Iris Idelson-Shein (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany) Part I: The Monster Without: Monsters in Jewish-Christian Inter-Cultural Discourse 1. Monsters, Demons and Jews in the Painting of Hieronymus Bosch, Debra Higgs Strickland (University of Glasgow, UK) 2. Bestial Bodies on the Jewish Margins: Race, Ethnicity and Otherness in Medieval Manuscripts Illuminated for Jews, Marc Michael Epstein (Vassar College, USA) 3. enge unpathas uncuð gelad: The Long Walk to Freedom, Asa Simon Mittman (California State University, Chico, USA) and Miriamne Ara Krummel (University of Dayton, USA) 4. Demonic Entanglements: Contextualisations of Matted Hair in Medieval and Early Modern Western and Eastern Ashkenaz, François Guesnet (University College London, UK) 5. A Jewish Frankenstein: Making Monsters in Modernist German Grotesques, Joela Jacobs (University of Arizona, USA) 6. “Der Volf” or the Jew as Out(side of the)law, Jay Geller (Vanderbilt University, USA) 7. Stranger in the House: Gender, Sex and Jewishness in Weimar Cinema’s Monsters, Cathy Gelbin (University of Manchester, UK) 8. Monsters in the Testimonies of Holocaust Survivors, Kobi Kabalek (University of Haifa, Israel) Part II: The Monster Within: Monsters in Jewish Intra-Communal Discourse 9. Unearthing the 'Children of Cain': Between Human, Animal, and Demon in Medieval Jewish Culture, David I. Shyovitz (Northwestern University, USA) 10. Sexuality and Communal Space in Stories about the Marriage of Men and She-Demons, David Rotman (Achva Academic College, Israel) 11. The Raging Rabbi: Aggression and Agency in an Early Modern Yiddish Werewolf Tale, Astrid Lembke (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany) 12. Out of the Mouths of Babes and Sucklings, David B. Ruderman (University of Pennsylvania, USA) 13. Sexorcism: On the Sexual Dimensions of Jewish Exorcism Techniques, J. H. Chajes (University of Haifa, Israel) 14. Rabbinic Monsters: The World of Wonder and Rabbinic Writings at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century, Maoz Kahana (Tel Aviv University, Israel) 15. End of the Demons?: Isaac Bashevis Singer's Reflections on the Eclipse of Demons and Monsters by Human Evil in the 20th Century, Christian Wiese (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany) Index
An exploration of monsters and monstrosity in Jewish history, considering both the portrayal of Jews as monsters and the monsters created by the Jews from the Middle Ages to the modern era.
Iris Idelson-Shein is Gerda Henkel Research Fellow at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. She is the author of Difference of a Different Kind: Jewish Constructions of Race During the Long Eighteenth Century (2014). Christian Wiese holds the Martin Buber Chair in Jewish Thought and Philosophy at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. He is the editor, together with Cornelia Wilhelm, of American Jewry: Transcending the European Experience? (Bloomsbury, 2016).
[An] excellent addition to the scholarly study of monsters …
Monsters and Monstrosity in Jewish History presents an engaging,
multi-sided dialogue … [This] book will be of interest to scholars
of Judaism, medieval Europe, religion, film studies, art history,
monster studies, and related disciplines.
*Reading Religion*
An erudite and timely book. Emphasizing how the monster works
within Jewish texts and images, how Jews themselves have often been
made to function as monsters, and how the Jewish monster "stares
back", this is a landmark work of scholarship.
*Jeffrey J. Cohen, Dean of Humanities, Arizona State University,
USA*
Idelson-Shein and Wiese - along with the volume’s many other
intrepid contributors - are the field’s Van Helsings:
monster-hunters, who, instead of proceeding with stakes and garlic,
use the tools of cutting-edge scholarship to track down the traces
of Jewish monstrosity in all its protean and subtle forms, and
bring them into brilliant light. An endlessly stimulating
volume.
*Jeremy Dauber, Atran Professor of Yiddish Language, Literature and
Culture and Director of Columbia's Institute of Israel and Jewish
Studies, Columbia University, USA*
Reading the diverse collection of essays in Monsters and
Monstrosity in Jewish History: From the Middle Ages to Modernity, I
found myself at once educated, entertained...and alarmed. If the
essays, taken together, show monsters and monstrosity to have been
fluid categories over a millennium of Jewish history, they also
show that the “monster” was not quite an empty signifier. Indeed,
menacing monsters are today being empowered the world over by naive
electorates. Despite the astounding popularity of Frankenstein and
The Golem, their shared message seems unheeded: those who believe
that a monster will serve its creators’ interests are tragically
mistaken. This is my takeaway for today, but I would be remiss were
I not to emphasize that the great achievement of this volume is its
demonstration that by looking at the seemingly marginal topic of
monsters and monstrosity in Jewish history, central and essential
features of the historical landscape are illuminated—albeit in
black light!
*Yossi Chajes, Senior Lecturer in Jewish History, University of
Haifa, Israel.*
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