Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12202/8462
Title: Fine, Steven. (2021). “They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews. Religions 12: 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
Authors: Fine, Steven
Keywords: Samaritan
midrash
Aggada
Sefer Yuḥasin
Joshua
Issue Date: 11-Aug-2021
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Fine, S. (2021). They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews. Religions 12: 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
Series/Report no.: Religions;12
Abstract: This article relates the transmission history of a single Samaritan text and its fascinating trajectory from a Samaritan legend into early modern rabbinic tradition, and on to nineteenth and early twentieth century Jewish studies circles. It focuses on the only Samaritan narrative cited in all of Louis Ginzberg’s monumental Legends of the Jews (1909–1938). Often called the “Epistle of Joshua son of Nun,” I trace the trajectory of this story from a medieval Samaritan chronicle to Samuel Sulam’s 1566 publication of Abraham Zacuto’s Sefer Yuḥasin. From there, we move to early modern belles lettres in Hebrew and Yiddish, western scholarship and then to the great Jewish anthologizers of the fin de siècle, Micha Yosef Berdyczewski, Judah David Eisenstein and Louis Ginzberg. I will suggest reasons why this tale was so appealing to Sulam, a Sephardi scholar based in Istanbul, that he appended it to Sefer Yuḥasin, and what about this tale of heroism ingratiated it to early modern European and then early Zionist readers. The afterlife of this tale is a rare instance of Samaritan influence upon classical Jewish literature, undermining assumptions of unidirectional Jewish influence upon the minority Samaritan culture from antiquity to modern times. View Full-Text
Description: Scholarly article
URI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12202/8462
ISSN: 2077-1444
Appears in Collections:Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies (BRGS): Faculty Publications

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