The Second Commandment, prohibiting both the worship and manufacture of graven images, is often employed as a mechanism for explaining a perceived absence of Jewish participation in the visual arts, in spite of a well recorded history of Jewish participation in the manufacture of graven images which are typically classed as craft objects. This article aims to introduce to theology the scepticism towards hierarchical distinctions between art and craft which is already familiar in the world of art theory, and by so doing prompt a dislocation of theological reflection on works of art from the point of visual engagement to the point of manufacture. It suggests that attentiveness to Jewish discourses about material production opens up interestin...
AbstractThe sacredness, though always has a destination other than the common, does not always have ...
This paper provides a broad historical overview of how Judeo-Christian philosophy and values have be...
Against the commonly held opinion that ancient Judaism was an artless culture, this sumptuously illu...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Literature a...
Contemporary commentators are well aware that the Jewish tradition is not an aniconic one. Far from ...
Contemporary commentators are well aware that the Jewish tradition is not an aniconic one. Far fro...
In light of the theological proscription of image-making in Judaic law, this dissertation interprets...
Supported by cultural and historical studies of Jewish art, this article challenges twentieth‐centur...
The widespread assumption that Jewish religious tradition is mediated through words, not pictures, h...
Culturally visible images of bodies (especially women’s) are increasingly those that have been subje...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRep.It has long been taken as a truism that Judais...
The people of image. Jews and art. Using as its point of departure the recent publications (in Engli...
People of the Jewish faith base their belief on the written word of the Torah. Presented in this pap...
For centuries Christians believed Judaism to be a religious tradition which prohibited the represent...
While creation imagery in general is common in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, this es...
AbstractThe sacredness, though always has a destination other than the common, does not always have ...
This paper provides a broad historical overview of how Judeo-Christian philosophy and values have be...
Against the commonly held opinion that ancient Judaism was an artless culture, this sumptuously illu...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Literature a...
Contemporary commentators are well aware that the Jewish tradition is not an aniconic one. Far from ...
Contemporary commentators are well aware that the Jewish tradition is not an aniconic one. Far fro...
In light of the theological proscription of image-making in Judaic law, this dissertation interprets...
Supported by cultural and historical studies of Jewish art, this article challenges twentieth‐centur...
The widespread assumption that Jewish religious tradition is mediated through words, not pictures, h...
Culturally visible images of bodies (especially women’s) are increasingly those that have been subje...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRep.It has long been taken as a truism that Judais...
The people of image. Jews and art. Using as its point of departure the recent publications (in Engli...
People of the Jewish faith base their belief on the written word of the Torah. Presented in this pap...
For centuries Christians believed Judaism to be a religious tradition which prohibited the represent...
While creation imagery in general is common in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, this es...
AbstractThe sacredness, though always has a destination other than the common, does not always have ...
This paper provides a broad historical overview of how Judeo-Christian philosophy and values have be...
Against the commonly held opinion that ancient Judaism was an artless culture, this sumptuously illu...