Neis traces an expression of bodily language (kavvanat halev, literally “directing the heart”) from biblical to early rabbinic sources and demonstrates how it oriented people to the affective, physical, and spatial dimensions of prayer. Rejecting a binary that would treat such language as either mental/subjective (and thus metaphorically) or soley physical/objective , Neis argues that we must unpack the fraught meaning of such corporeal spatial terminology to understand “rabbinic concepts of body-mind, ritual technology, and sacred geography." Neis highlights the guidelines for the body in prayer mode found in the rulings of Mishnah and Tosefta Berakhot, which provide a geography and choreography of bodily and affective orientation that cal...
Emile Durkheim notes that characteristic of all religions is the division between the holy and the p...
Symbolism of the human body in Psalm 38 Symbolization of a sick body in an ancient Israelite cultic ...
It is quite likely that the origins of prayer are to be found in ancient mourning and bereavement ri...
[[This is a statement of the problem for the Prayer of the Heart research – book in progress. Please...
This thesis examines the philosophy of language of Rabbi Dov Baer of Mezritch (d. 1772), one of the ...
The objective of this dissertation is to explore the meanings, significance, and functions of sacred...
Ancient Israelite anthropology considered the heart to be the seat of emotions, personality, rationa...
The authors of the psalms implemented body rhetoric, especially the notion of the �whole body� as th...
Body language constitutes a prominent feature of Hekhalot Rabbati's presentation of the mystical exp...
This article treats the cultural meaning of rabbinic toilet rules from their Tannaitic instantiation...
This work consists of a portfolio of creative writing in the form of a collection of short stories, ...
Kabbalah: path of language mysticismFor Judaism, the Hebrew language is not simply a communicative m...
This study constitutes the first comprehensive examination of rabbinic body language represented in ...
textThe “Holy Spirit” is a familiar concept in Christianity, but in its original Hebrew construction...
The emphasis in recent years on contemplation, prayer and ritual has raised new questions about the ...
Emile Durkheim notes that characteristic of all religions is the division between the holy and the p...
Symbolism of the human body in Psalm 38 Symbolization of a sick body in an ancient Israelite cultic ...
It is quite likely that the origins of prayer are to be found in ancient mourning and bereavement ri...
[[This is a statement of the problem for the Prayer of the Heart research – book in progress. Please...
This thesis examines the philosophy of language of Rabbi Dov Baer of Mezritch (d. 1772), one of the ...
The objective of this dissertation is to explore the meanings, significance, and functions of sacred...
Ancient Israelite anthropology considered the heart to be the seat of emotions, personality, rationa...
The authors of the psalms implemented body rhetoric, especially the notion of the �whole body� as th...
Body language constitutes a prominent feature of Hekhalot Rabbati's presentation of the mystical exp...
This article treats the cultural meaning of rabbinic toilet rules from their Tannaitic instantiation...
This work consists of a portfolio of creative writing in the form of a collection of short stories, ...
Kabbalah: path of language mysticismFor Judaism, the Hebrew language is not simply a communicative m...
This study constitutes the first comprehensive examination of rabbinic body language represented in ...
textThe “Holy Spirit” is a familiar concept in Christianity, but in its original Hebrew construction...
The emphasis in recent years on contemplation, prayer and ritual has raised new questions about the ...
Emile Durkheim notes that characteristic of all religions is the division between the holy and the p...
Symbolism of the human body in Psalm 38 Symbolization of a sick body in an ancient Israelite cultic ...
It is quite likely that the origins of prayer are to be found in ancient mourning and bereavement ri...