The Legend of Safed: Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah

The Legend of Safed: Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah

The Legend of Safed: Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah

The Legend of Safed: Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah

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Overview

Jewish life through the legends created and narrated in Safed in the sixteenth century.

In 1908, Solomon Schechter—discoverer of the Cairo Geniza and one of the founders of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America—published his groundbreaking essay on the city of Safed (Tzfat) during the sixteenth century. In the essay, Schechter pointed out the exceptional cultural achievements (religious law, moral teaching, hermeneutics, poetry, geography) of this small city in the upper Galilee but did not yet see the importance of including the foundation on which all of these fields began—the legends that were developed, told, and spread in Safed during this period. In The Legend of Safed: Life and Fantasy in the City of Kabbalah, author Eli Yassif utilizes "new historicism" methodology in order to use the non-canonical materials—legends and myths, visions, dreams, rumors, everyday dialogues—to present these legends in their historical and cultural context and use them to better understand the culture of Safed. This approach considers the literary text not as a reflection of reality, but a part of reality itself—taking sides in the debates and decisions of humans and serving as a major tool for understanding society and human mentality.

Divided into seven chapters, The Legend of Safed begins with an explanation of how the myth of Safed was founded on the general belief that during this "golden age" (1570–1620), Safed was an idyllic location in which complete peace and understanding existed between the diverse groups of people who migrated to the city. Yassif goes on to analyze thematic characteristics of the legends, including spatial elements, the function of dreams, mysticism, sexual sins, and omniscience. The book concludes with a discussion of the tension between fantasy (Safed is a sacred city built on morality, religious thought, and well-being for all) and reality (every person is full of weaknesses and flaws) and how that is the basis for understanding the vitality of Safed myth and its immense impact on the future of Jewish life and culture.

The Legend of Safed is intended for students, scholars, and general readers of medieval and early modern Jewish studies, Hebrew literature, and folklore.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814346846
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 05/20/2019
Series: Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology
Pages: 302
Sales rank: 729,790
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Eli Yassif is professor emeritus of Hebrew literature and Jewish folklore at Tel-Aviv University. He is the author of many books and scholarly articles in the field of the Hebrew story in the Middle Ages and the history of Jewish folklore. His book The Hebrew Folktale: History, Genre, Meaning won the National Jewish Book Award in 2000 and became the standard textbook for the study of Jewish folk-narratives.

What People are Saying About This

Emanuel Ringelblum Distinguished Professor, Uc Davis - David Biale

In this important book, Eli Yassif, one of Israel's leading folklorists, demonstrates how the myth of Safed as the center of sixteenth-century Jewish mysticism was shaped by folktales written in the seventeenth century. These tales reveal a tension between everyday reality in Safed and mystical-messianic ideals. Yassif's book overturns many conventional understandings about Safed and will be of great interest to historians, literary critics, and folklorists.

Ephraim Shoham-Shafer of on the Margins of a Minority: Leprosy

Eli Yassif's Legends of Safed is a bold and successful attempt to read into the legends that formed the myth of Safed in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The psychosocial backdrop of Lurianic Kabbala and mysticism are carefully revealed as Yassif masterfully uncovers the multilayered legend texts and brings forth new dimensions of this time and place as it witnessed an astonishing religious awakening.

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