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Border lines: the partition of judeo-christianity

Autor Daniel Boyarin

Editorial UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Border lines: the partition of judeo-christianity
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  • Editorial UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
  • ISBN13 9780812237641
  • ISBN10 0812237641
  • Tipus Llibre
  • Pàgines 374
  • Any Edició 2004
  • Encuadernació Tela

Border lines: the partition of judeo-christianity

Autor Daniel Boyarin

Editorial UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

-5% dte.    49,91€
47,41€
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Detalls del llibre

"The historical separation between Judaism and Christianity is often figured as a clearly defined break of a single entity into two separate religions. Following this model, there would have been one religion known as Judaism before the birth of Christ, which then took on a hybrid identity. Even before its subsequent division, certain beliefs and practices of this composite would have been identifiable as Christian or Jewish. In Border Lines, however, Daniel Boyarin makes a case for a very different way of thinking about the historical development that is the partition of Judaeo-Christianity." "There were no characteristics or features that could be described as uniquely Jewish or Christian in late antiquity, Boyarin argues. Rather, Jesus-following Jews and Jews who did not follow Jesus lived on a cultural map in which beliefs, such as that in a second divine being, and practices, such as keeping kosher or maintaining the Sabbath, were widely and variably distributed. The ultimate distinctions between Judaism and Christianity were imposed from above by "border-makers," heresiologists anxious to construct a discrete identity for Christianity. By defining some beliefs and practices as Christian and others as Jewish or heretical, they moved ideas, behaviors, and people to one side or another of an artificial border - and, Boyarin contends, invented the very notion of religion." Boyarin demonstrates that it was early Christian writers who first imagined religion as a realm of practice and belief that could be separated from the broader cultural network of language, genealogy, or geography, and that they did so precisely to give Christians an identity. In the end, he suggests, the Rabbis refused the option offered by the Christian empire of converting Judaism into such a religion. Christianity, a religion, and Judaism, something that was not a religion, stood on opposite sides of a border line drawn more or less successfully across their respective populations. As a