Abstract
In tractate Gittin of the Babylonian Talmud, as well as in Midrash Lamentations Rabbah, there appears a well-known series of stories known as the 'Legends of Destruction'. In these stories, the sages process the trauma of the destruction, the mass of killing and the enormous difficulties that followed. The article seeks to offer a new reading of the last story in the series, 'שוליא דנגרי' [the carpenter's apprentice]. In my reading, I emphasize the analogy, familiar from rabbinic literature, between the destruction of the Temple and the destruction of the home and private space. The story reveals the elite's anxiety about class reversals and the theological and political ramifications of these changes.
Original language | Hebrew |
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Pages (from-to) | 3-17 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | מחקרי ירושלים בפולקלור יהודי |
Volume | ל"א |
State | Published - 2018 |
IHP publications
- ihp
- Aggada
- Jews -- History -- 70-638, Destruction of the Second Temple to rise of Islam
- Rabbinical literature
- Social stratification
- Talmud Bavli -- Gittin
- Women in rabbinical literature
- אגדות חז"ל
- חורבן בית שני
- נשים בספרות חז"ל
- ספרות עברית של תקופת חז"ל
- רבנים ותלמידיהם
- ריבוד חברתי
- תלמוד בבלי. גטין