[ FreeCourseWeb.com ] Palaces of Time: Jewish Calendar and Culture in Early Modern Europe
If You Need More Stuff, kindly Visit and Support Us -->> https://FreeCourseWeb.com
English | ISBN: 0674052544 | 2011 | 304 pages | PDF | 1315 KB
From one of the leading historians of the Jewish past comes a stunning look into a previously unexamined dimension of Jewish life and culture: the calendar. In the late sixteenth century, Pope Gregory XIII instituted a momentous reform of Western timekeeping, and with it a period of great instability. Jews, like all minority cultures in Europe, had to realign their time-keeping to accord with the new Christian calendar.
Elisheva Carlebach shows that the calendar is a complex and living system, constantly modified as new preoccupations emerge and old priorities fade. Calendars serve to structure time and activities and thus become mirrors of experience. Through this seemingly mundane and all-but-overlooked document, we can reimagine the quotidian world of early modern Jewry, of market days and sacred days, of times to avoid Christian gatherings and times to secure communal treasures. In calendars, we see one of the central paradoxes of Jewish existence: the need to encompass the culture of the other while retaining one’s own unique culture. Carlebach reveals that Jews have always lived in multiple time scales, and nstrates how their accounting for time, as much as any cultural monument, has shaped Jewish life.
If You Need More Stuff, kindly Visit and Support Us -->> https://DevCourseWeb.com
Get Latest Tips and Tricks and Support Us -->> https://CourseWikia.com
We upload these learning materials for the people from all over the world, who have the talent and motivation to sharpen their skills/ knowledge but do not have the financial support to afford the materials. If you like this content and if you are truly in a position that you can actually buy the materials, then Please, we repeat, Please, Support Authors. They Deserve it! Because always remember, without "Them", you and we won't be here having this conversation. Think about it! Peace...