Miriam Peskowitz offers a dramatic revision to our understanding of early rabbinic Judaism. Using a wide range of sourcesarchaeology, legal texts, grave goods, technology, art, and writings in Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, and Latinshe challenges traditional assumptions regarding Judaism's historical development.
Following the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple by Roman armies in 70 C.E., new incarnations of Judaism emerged. Of these, rabbinic Judaism was the most successful, becomingtheclassical form of the religion. Through ancient stories involving Jewish spinners and weavers, Peskowitz re-examines this critical moment in Jewish history and presents a feminist interpretation in which gender takes center stage. She shows how notions of female and male were developed by the rabbis of Roman Palestine and why the distinctions were so important in the formation of their religious and legal tradition.
Rabbinic attention to women, men, sexuality, and gender took place within the ordinary tedium of everyday life, in acts that were both familiar and mundane. While spinners and weavers performed what seemed like ordinary tasks, their craft was in fact symbolic of larger gender and sexual issues, which Peskowitz deftly explicates. Her study of ancient spinning and her abundant source material will set new standards in the fields of gender studies, Jewish studies, and cultural studies.
Miriam B. Peskowitzis Assistant Professor of Religion at the University of Florida and coeditor, with Laura Levitt, ofJudaism since Gender(1996).
Peskowitz weaves rabbinic rhetoric, archaeological data, and critical theory into a detailed cultural map of Roman-period Judaism. Impressively documented, compellingly argued, this work demonstrates through its particular attention to the ordinarywork, tools, bodies, gossip, the minutiae of everyday lifehow gender was constructed, maintained, and ultimately naturalized. A brillianlƒ#