
Song of the Distant Dove
Judah Halevi's Pilgrimage
Raymond P. Scheindlin(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 20. December 2007
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-0-19-531542-4 (ISBN)
Description
Judah Halevi (ca 1085-1141), the best-known and most beloved of premodern Hebrew poets, abandoned his home and family in Spain and spent the last year of his life traveling to the Land of Israel, where he hoped to die amid its sacred ruins. The events of his journey and its meaning to him are preserved in recently discovered letters of the age and in his ever-popular poetry. The Song of the Distant Dove tells the story of Halevis journey through selections from the documents, some never before available in English, and explores its meaning through discussions of his stirring poetry, presented in new verse translations with full commentary.
In the course of the discussion, we meet Halevis circle of Jewish businessmen and intellectuals in Islamic Spain and Egypt, examine their way of life, and learn about their place in Arabic and Islamic culture, then at its height. We learn that Halevi was partially motivated by a desire to repudiate his contemporaries hybrid Judeo-Arabic culture and return to a purely Jewish way of life; yet the echoes of the Islamic religious sensibility in his poetry show that he could not escape it completely. And while the precarious situation of the Jews as a tolerated minority in the Islamic world weighed heavily on him, the poetry shows that he was motivated not so much by national sentiment as by his own distinctive inner life.
Touching on literature, religion, and history, this book provides a thorough introduction to Judeo-Arabic culture as well as a close look at a commanding personality of the agea doctor, theologian, communal leader, and, above all, a poet and at one of the best-documented episodes in medieval Jewish religious history.
In the course of the discussion, we meet Halevis circle of Jewish businessmen and intellectuals in Islamic Spain and Egypt, examine their way of life, and learn about their place in Arabic and Islamic culture, then at its height. We learn that Halevi was partially motivated by a desire to repudiate his contemporaries hybrid Judeo-Arabic culture and return to a purely Jewish way of life; yet the echoes of the Islamic religious sensibility in his poetry show that he could not escape it completely. And while the precarious situation of the Jews as a tolerated minority in the Islamic world weighed heavily on him, the poetry shows that he was motivated not so much by national sentiment as by his own distinctive inner life.
Touching on literature, religion, and history, this book provides a thorough introduction to Judeo-Arabic culture as well as a close look at a commanding personality of the agea doctor, theologian, communal leader, and, above all, a poet and at one of the best-documented episodes in medieval Jewish religious history.
Reviews / Votes
Scheindlin is a master at situating the poems within the context of both Jewish and Islamic sources ... Scheindlin's insights into the poetry as a vivid expression of the poet's life and thought make this study strikingly rich. It is at once a literary study, a work of religious though, and an important contribution to cultural and intellectual history. This remarkable study will leave a deep imprint on both historical scholarship and religious imagination. * Diana Lobel, Journal of Ecclesiastical History *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
652 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-531542-4 (9780195315424)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
12/2007
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€31.99
Available for download

E-Book
12/2007
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€20.99
Available for download
Person
Raymond Scheindlin is Professor of Medieval Hebrew Literature and director of the Shalom Spiegel Institute of Medieval Hebrew Poetry, Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He is the author of Wine, Women, and Death: Medieval Hebrew Poems on the Good Life, The Gazelle: Medieval Hebrew Poetry on God, Israel, and the Soul, A Short History of the Jewish People, and a verse translation of the Book of Job. He was the
recipient of the Cultural Achievement Award of the National Foundation for Jewish Culture in 2004.
recipient of the Cultural Achievement Award of the National Foundation for Jewish Culture in 2004.
Author
Professor of Medieval Hebrew LiteratureProfessor of Medieval Hebrew Literature, Jewish Theological Seminary
Content
Part I: A Portrait of the Pilgrim
Chapter 1:: Halevi's Religious Development
Chapter 2:: The National Problem
Chapter 3:: The Visionary
Part II: The Pilgrimage
Chapter 4:: Alexandria
Chapter 5:: Cairo
Chapter 6:: Alexandria Again
Part III: The Pilgrim Speaks
Chapter 7:: An Epistle
Chapter 8:: In Imagination
Chapter 9:: Argumentation
Chapter 10:: The Voyage
Chapter 1:: Halevi's Religious Development
Chapter 2:: The National Problem
Chapter 3:: The Visionary
Part II: The Pilgrimage
Chapter 4:: Alexandria
Chapter 5:: Cairo
Chapter 6:: Alexandria Again
Part III: The Pilgrim Speaks
Chapter 7:: An Epistle
Chapter 8:: In Imagination
Chapter 9:: Argumentation
Chapter 10:: The Voyage