'Plateas Publice Discurrentes': Performance and the Audio-Visual Jew in the Age of Pope Innocent III (original) (raw)
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The Jewish-Christian Encounter in Medieval Preaching
2014
This book explores the complexity of preaching as a phenomenon in the medieval Jewish-Christian encounter. This was not only an "encounter" as physical meeting or confrontation (such as the forced attendance of Jews at Christian sermons that took place across Europe), but also an "imaginary" or theological encounter in which Jews remained a figure from a distant constructed time and place who served only to underline and verify Christian teachings. Contributors also explore the Jewish response to Christian anti-Jewish preaching in their own preaching and religious instruction. Contents: 1. Jonathan Adams and Jussi Hanska, Introduction: The Jewish-Christian Encounter in Medieval Preaching Part I: Regional Studies 2. Raúl González Salinero, Preaching and Jews in Late Antique and Visigothic Iberia 3. Regina D. Schiewer, Sub Iudaica Infirmitate — "Under the Jewish Weakness": Jews in Medieval German Sermons 4. Jonathan Adams, Preaching about an Absent Minority: Medieval Danish Sermons and Jews Part II: Preachers and Occasions 5. Kati Ihnat, "Our Sister Is Little and Has No Breasts": Mary and the Jews in the Sermons of Honorius Augustodunensis 6. Filippo Sedda, The Anti-Jewish Sermons of John of Capistrano: Matters and Context 7. Maria Giuseppina Muzzarelli, The Effects of Bernardino da Feltre’s Preaching on the Jews 8. Jussi Hanska, Sermons on the Tenth Sunday After Holy Trinity: Another Occasion for Anti-Jewish Preaching Part III: Symbols and Images 9. David I. Shyovitz, Beauty and the Bestiary: Animals, Wonder, and Polemic in Medieval Ashkenaz 10. Giacomo Todeschini, The Origin of a Medieval Anti-Jewish Stereotype: The Jews as Receivers of Stolen Goods (Twelfth to Thirteenth Centuries) 11. Pietro Delcorno, The Roles of Jews in the Florentine Sacre Rappresentazioni: Loyal Citizens, People to be Converted, Enemies of the Faith 12. Nirit Ben-Aryeh Debby, Mendicants and Jews in Florence 13. Martine Boiteux, Preaching to the Jews in Early Modern Rome: Words and Images
Texas Tech University Master's Theses, 2012
This thesis examines the Jewish Other during a period of great upheaval within Christian Europe. It contends that the Jewish Other underwent a great transformation within the period. The papacy began to more aggressively deal with Jews, and use new terminology for them, representations of Synagoga in medieval art took on a more negative tone, and Jews' appearances in the medieval sermon increased and contained many negative images. On the whole, the Jewish Other was malleable and could be used by churchmen, preachers, or artists for various purposes, most of which served to edify the Church at the expense of Jews.
The name of Bernhard Blumenkranz is well known to all those who study the history of European Jews in the Middle Ages and in particular the history of Jewish-Christian relations. Blumenkranz was born in Vienna in 1913; he left for Switzerland during the war and obtained a doctorate at the University of Basel on the portrayal of Jews in the works of Augustine. He subsequently moved to France where his numerous publications revived and renovated the field of Jewish studies. The international group of scholars who wrote the fifteen essays in this volume, beyond paying homage to Blumenkranz’s work, trace the trajectories of various lines of inquiry that he initiated: Christian theology of Judaism, problems of conversion and proselytism, geography and topography of Medieval Jewish communities, the representation of Jews in Christian art. These essays provide both an assessment of Blumenkranz’s intellectual legacy and a snapshot of the evolution of the field over the last sixty years.