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A Woman Called Moses

A Prophet for Our Time

Jean-Christophe Attias

$34.99

Hardback

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English
Verso Books
02 July 2020
According to tradition, Moses wrote the first five books of the Bible. Depicted there in suprising and contradicting ways, and both for and against his people, bringer of the tablets of law which he then breaks.

By way of a series of possible portraits—including one of a female Moses—Jean-Christophe Attias follows the metamorphoses of the Hebrew liberator through ages and cultures. Drawing on rabbinical sources as well as the Bible itself, he examines the words of the texts and especially their silences. He discovers here a fragile prophet, teacher of a Judaism of the spirit, of wandering, and of incompleteness. The Judaism of Moses speaks to believers and others—to Jews, of course, but also far beyond them, inviting its hearers to have done with tribal pride, the violence of weapons, and the tyranny of a special place.

By:  
Imprint:   Verso Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 210mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 19mm
Weight:   322g
ISBN:   9781788736398
ISBN 10:   1788736397
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Jean-Christophe Attias is Professor of medieval Jewish thought at the École pratique des hautes études. Author of numerous scholarly works, essays and a personal memoir, he has published in English: Israel, the Impossible Land, with Esther Benbassa; The Jews and their Future: A Conversation on Jewish Identities; The Jew and the Other and The Jews and the Bible.

Reviews for A Woman Called Moses: A Prophet for Our Time

A sparkling essay. -- Maurice Sartre * L'Histoire * A very sure erudition, an experienced exchange with the Scriptures, a joyous freedom of expression, reflection and analysis, moments of poetic grace alongside high-level linguistic analysis, a writing with wings. -- Pierre Assouline * La Republique des Livres * A very personal Moses. -- Dominique Greiner * La Croix * The reader is left free to draw political lessons. Moses left no lineage, and it is unreasonable to claim this in the name of an improbable genealogy. There can therefore be no Judaism of blood that crossed centuries and continents to establish a right of ownership over an idolatrous land. Contemporary relevance is not far away. -- Denis Sieffert * Politis * We should immerse ourselves in this fragile Moses, rescued from the bland waters of the Sulpicians or the burning waters of holy fools . -- Nicolas Weill * Le Monde * Jean-Christophe Attias, a specialist in medieval Jewish thought, has freed himself from the academic straitjacket and drawn in a beautiful and evocative style a portrait of Moses as an uncertain prophet . -- David Fontaine * Le Canard enchaine * Regenerated by reflection, revived by the power of the mind, Jean-Christophe Attias's Moses emerges from the pages as a young man, freed at last of Charlton Heston's granite features and relieved of the gigantic weight that the three monotheistic religions imposed on him. -- Christian Makarian * L'Express * A brilliant book, as decidedly original as it is disturbing. -- Catherine Golliaud * Le Point * Praise for The Jews and the Bible: This beautifully written (and translated) monograph casts profound doubt on attempts to simplistically characterize the terms Jews and Bible or to view the relationship between them one dimensionally... Highly recommended. -- L. J. Greenspoon * Choice * Praise for The Jews and the Bible: Professor Attias, a significant French intellectual and scholar of medieval Judaism, has written the first book that explores broadly the place of the Bible in Jewish culture throughout the ages. Engagingly written, this is an important initial foray into this broad and significant topic that raises important questions concerning the place of the Bible within contemporary Jewish culture. -- Marc Brettler, Brandeis University Praise for The Jews and the Bible: A study of the Jews' peculiar relationships with the Bible, Jean-Christophe Attias's The Jews and the Bible is an excellent companion to the recent crop of books on the Bible's construction... [They] tell us how the Bible came to be, Attias focuses on how it came to be regarded. -- Jay Michaelson * Forward * Praise for The Jews and the Other: This is a rich summation of the resources and challenges of Jewish identity and difference at the turn of the third Christian millennium. Committed, lucid, critical, and informed, it exemplifies a vibrantly human science of Jewishness. -- Jonathan Boyarin, author of Storm from Paradise: The Politics of Jewish Memory and Thinking in Jewish Praise for Israel, the Impossible Land: Jean-Christophe Attias and Esther Benbassa have written an elegant and erudite book demonstrating the complex relationship to the land of Israel throughout Jewish history. * American Historical Review * In one of the most imaginative and creative works of contemporary Jewish thought, Jean Christophe Attias presents a fascinating interpretation of Moses as a woman. Building on intriguing suggestions in the Bible, Arttias inspires us to wonder how our understandings of the Bible and its sacred history might change if we think of Moses as female. -- Susannah Heschel, Eli Black Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College In this original and magical portrait of Moses, Attias takes the stock figure of the stern lawgiver and transforms him into 'one of us'. His Moses combines humility and grandeur, frailty and strength. He is a Jew and a non-Jew, 'and all the more of a human being because he is both'. Likewise, 'fully a man because he is also a woman'. Even his death emphasizes his humanity: he 'dies likes the rest of us, prematurely'. 'We do not know who buried him.' But we do know who brings him back to life: Attias the scribe. In this inspired, humane and deeply moving book, the 'Woman called Moses' speaks also to 'those of us who are secular'. She is truly 'a prophet for our times'. -- Brian Klug Who was Moses? Not the historical Moses or the Moses of tradition, but the biblical Moses without apologetics, Moses in his most contradictory and obscure configuration. In A Woman Called Moses Attias presents us with a provocative, evocative, and courageous reading of Moses, seamlessly drawing from the biblical imaginary and classical commentaries combined with modern sensibilities and literary finesse that brings this imaginary figure to life. Attias' pen sparkles with literary insight and poetic breadth. This work should be enjoyed slowly, like fine French wine. -- Shaul Magid, Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College Attias's respect and attention to Moses's example and legacy shines through. ... Open-minded readers are in for a thought-provoking treat. * Publishers Weekly * Thoughtful and thought-provoking, informative and iconoclastic, and an impressively detailed work of original scholarship, Woman Called Moses: Prophet for Our Time is extraordinary and inherently fascinating reading. -- John Burroughs * Midwest Book Review * Anybody with an interest in theology, or indeed Jewish history should enjoy A Woman Called Moses and be stimulated by it. Work like this underlines once more the extent to which the Bible has formed western thought, for Christians worshipping the deity, and equally for atheists in their vehement rejection. -- Drew Ratter * Shetland Times * Attias's portrayal of Moses reveals the author's respect, tenderness, and even love for the figure. ... Ultimately, through his imaginative depiction of Moses, Attias discloses a poignant longing and hope. -- Mahri Leonard-Fleckman * Commonweal Magazine *


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