The Footsteps of Israel: Understanding Jews in Anglo-Saxon England
by Andrew Scheil
University of Michigan Press, 2004 Cloth: 978-0-472-11408-5 Library of Congress Classification BM585.S265 2004 Dewey Decimal Classification 261.26094209021
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
"This innovative, well-researched study looks at anti-Judaic rhetoric in the Old English and Latin texts of Anglo-Saxon England-a land lacking real Jews. The author isolates a common pool of inherited images for portraying the Jew, and teaches us to hear, especially in the vernacular, their increasingly dark and disturbing inflections."
---Roberta Frank, Yale University
"The Footsteps of Israel is a fascinating study of a pervasive stereotype. Scheil's analysis of how Jews, with no real physical presence in Anglo-Saxon England, captured the imagination of writers of the period, is a superb achievement."
---Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New-York Historical Society
"The elegance of Scheil's prose weaves a unifying thread through the vast literary and historical tapestry he presents, moving with grace from Latin to Old English, from Bede to later authors, from Wordsworth and Blake to modern writers. He speaks elegantly of these texts' conversations with the past, and the Jews emerge as both enemies and spiritual antecedents of the 'New Israel' of Anglo-Saxon England."
---Stephen Spector, State University of New York, Stonybrook
Jews are the omnipresent border-dwellers of medieval culture, a source of powerful metaphors active in the margins of medieval Christianity. This book outlines an important prehistory to later persecutions in England and beyond, yet it also provides a new understanding of the previously unrecognized roles Jews and Judaism played in the construction of social identity in early England.
Andrew P. Scheil approaches the Anglo-Saxon understanding of Jews from a variety of directions, including a survey of the lengthy history of the ideology of England as the New Israel, its sources in late antique texts and its manifestation in both Old English and Latin texts from Anglo-Saxon England. In tandem with this perhaps more sympathetic understanding of the Jews is a darker vision of anti-Judaism, associating the Jews in an emotional fashion with the materiality of the body.
In exploring the complex ramifications of this history, the author is the first to assemble and study references to Jews in Anglo-Saxon culture. For this reason, The Footsteps of Israel will be an important source for Anglo-Saxonists, scholars of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, scholars of medieval antisemitism in general, students of Jewish history, and medievalists interested in cultural studies.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Andrew P. Scheil is Associate Professor of English at the University of Minnesota.
REVIEWS
"There is no question, nevertheless, that all future work will be indebted to Scheil, who has given us a well-written and closely argued analysis of the subject in The Footsteps of Israel."
—Scott DeGregorio, University of Michigan-Dearborn
— Scott DeGregorio, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Journal of English and Germanic Philology
"This book considers the various strategies used to portray Jews during the Anglo-Saxon period. [Scheil] argues for a more complex understanding of Anglo-Saxon anti-Judaism, claiming that such beliefs manifest specific anxieties about cultural history and identity."
—Modern Philology
— Andrew S. Rabin, Modern Philology
"Scheil's materials are complex, subtle, wide-ranging, and well expressed. He has, in a single monograph, considered a huge array of the Latin vernacular literature, iconography too, where relevant, of Anglo-Saxon England, and with a generous sensitivity that will be of value to historians, theologians, and literary critics . . . . Scheil has written an important and gripping book . . . ."
—Jane Roberts, The Journal of Theological Studies
— Jane Roberts, The Journal of Theological Studies
"[A] subtle and compelling book . . . . [A] major achievement in advancing our understanding of how the Anglo-Saxons viewed Judaism; it is sophisticated, beautifully structured and full of insights into late Antique as well as Anglo-Saxon texts and thought."
—Mary Clayton, The Medieval Review
— Mary Clayton, The Medieval Review
"The Footsteps of Israel is a fascinating study of a pervasive stereotype. Scheil's analysis of how Jews, with no real physical presence in Anglo-Saxon England, captured the imagination of writers of the period, is a superb achievement. "
—Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New-York Historical Society
— Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New York Historical Society
"This innovative, well-researched study looks at anti-Judaic rhetoric in the Old English and Latin texts of Anglo-Saxon England—a land lacking real Jews. The author isolates a common pool of inherited images for portraying the Jew, and teaches us to hear, especially in the vernacular, their increasingly dark and disturbing inflections."
—Roberta Frank, Yale University
— Roberta Frank, Yale University
"The elegance of Scheil's prose weaves a unifying thread through the vast literary and historical tapestry he presents, moving with grace from Latin to Old English, from Bede to later authors, from Wordsworth and Blake to modern writers. He speaks elegantly of these texts' conversations with the past, and the Jews emerge as both enemies and spiritual antecedents of the 'New Israel' of Anglo-Saxon England."
—Stephen Spector, SUNY, Stonybrook
— Stephen Spector, SUNY, Stonybrook
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One: Bede, The Jews, and the Exegetical Imagination
Introduction
Chapter One: Bede and Hate
Chapter Two: Bede and Love
Part Two: The Populus Israhel: Metaphor, Image, Exemplum
Introduction: Excursus on Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica
Chapter Three: The Populus Israhel Tradition
Chapter Four: The Populus Israhel Tradition in Britain
Part Three: Jews, Fury, and the Body
Introduction
Chapter Five: Anti-Judaic Rhetoric in the Vercelliand Blickling Manuscripts
Chapter Six: Anti-Judaism and Somatic Fiction
Part Four: Ælfric, Anti-Judaism, and the Tenth Century
Introduction
Chapter Seven: Ælfric’s De populo Israhel
Chapter Eight: Ælfric’s Maccabees
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
The Footsteps of Israel: Understanding Jews in Anglo-Saxon England
by Andrew Scheil
University of Michigan Press, 2004 Cloth: 978-0-472-11408-5
"This innovative, well-researched study looks at anti-Judaic rhetoric in the Old English and Latin texts of Anglo-Saxon England-a land lacking real Jews. The author isolates a common pool of inherited images for portraying the Jew, and teaches us to hear, especially in the vernacular, their increasingly dark and disturbing inflections."
---Roberta Frank, Yale University
"The Footsteps of Israel is a fascinating study of a pervasive stereotype. Scheil's analysis of how Jews, with no real physical presence in Anglo-Saxon England, captured the imagination of writers of the period, is a superb achievement."
---Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New-York Historical Society
"The elegance of Scheil's prose weaves a unifying thread through the vast literary and historical tapestry he presents, moving with grace from Latin to Old English, from Bede to later authors, from Wordsworth and Blake to modern writers. He speaks elegantly of these texts' conversations with the past, and the Jews emerge as both enemies and spiritual antecedents of the 'New Israel' of Anglo-Saxon England."
---Stephen Spector, State University of New York, Stonybrook
Jews are the omnipresent border-dwellers of medieval culture, a source of powerful metaphors active in the margins of medieval Christianity. This book outlines an important prehistory to later persecutions in England and beyond, yet it also provides a new understanding of the previously unrecognized roles Jews and Judaism played in the construction of social identity in early England.
Andrew P. Scheil approaches the Anglo-Saxon understanding of Jews from a variety of directions, including a survey of the lengthy history of the ideology of England as the New Israel, its sources in late antique texts and its manifestation in both Old English and Latin texts from Anglo-Saxon England. In tandem with this perhaps more sympathetic understanding of the Jews is a darker vision of anti-Judaism, associating the Jews in an emotional fashion with the materiality of the body.
In exploring the complex ramifications of this history, the author is the first to assemble and study references to Jews in Anglo-Saxon culture. For this reason, The Footsteps of Israel will be an important source for Anglo-Saxonists, scholars of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, scholars of medieval antisemitism in general, students of Jewish history, and medievalists interested in cultural studies.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Andrew P. Scheil is Associate Professor of English at the University of Minnesota.
REVIEWS
"There is no question, nevertheless, that all future work will be indebted to Scheil, who has given us a well-written and closely argued analysis of the subject in The Footsteps of Israel."
—Scott DeGregorio, University of Michigan-Dearborn
— Scott DeGregorio, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Journal of English and Germanic Philology
"This book considers the various strategies used to portray Jews during the Anglo-Saxon period. [Scheil] argues for a more complex understanding of Anglo-Saxon anti-Judaism, claiming that such beliefs manifest specific anxieties about cultural history and identity."
—Modern Philology
— Andrew S. Rabin, Modern Philology
"Scheil's materials are complex, subtle, wide-ranging, and well expressed. He has, in a single monograph, considered a huge array of the Latin vernacular literature, iconography too, where relevant, of Anglo-Saxon England, and with a generous sensitivity that will be of value to historians, theologians, and literary critics . . . . Scheil has written an important and gripping book . . . ."
—Jane Roberts, The Journal of Theological Studies
— Jane Roberts, The Journal of Theological Studies
"[A] subtle and compelling book . . . . [A] major achievement in advancing our understanding of how the Anglo-Saxons viewed Judaism; it is sophisticated, beautifully structured and full of insights into late Antique as well as Anglo-Saxon texts and thought."
—Mary Clayton, The Medieval Review
— Mary Clayton, The Medieval Review
"The Footsteps of Israel is a fascinating study of a pervasive stereotype. Scheil's analysis of how Jews, with no real physical presence in Anglo-Saxon England, captured the imagination of writers of the period, is a superb achievement. "
—Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New-York Historical Society
— Louise Mirrer, President and CEO, New York Historical Society
"This innovative, well-researched study looks at anti-Judaic rhetoric in the Old English and Latin texts of Anglo-Saxon England—a land lacking real Jews. The author isolates a common pool of inherited images for portraying the Jew, and teaches us to hear, especially in the vernacular, their increasingly dark and disturbing inflections."
—Roberta Frank, Yale University
— Roberta Frank, Yale University
"The elegance of Scheil's prose weaves a unifying thread through the vast literary and historical tapestry he presents, moving with grace from Latin to Old English, from Bede to later authors, from Wordsworth and Blake to modern writers. He speaks elegantly of these texts' conversations with the past, and the Jews emerge as both enemies and spiritual antecedents of the 'New Israel' of Anglo-Saxon England."
—Stephen Spector, SUNY, Stonybrook
— Stephen Spector, SUNY, Stonybrook
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One: Bede, The Jews, and the Exegetical Imagination
Introduction
Chapter One: Bede and Hate
Chapter Two: Bede and Love
Part Two: The Populus Israhel: Metaphor, Image, Exemplum
Introduction: Excursus on Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica
Chapter Three: The Populus Israhel Tradition
Chapter Four: The Populus Israhel Tradition in Britain
Part Three: Jews, Fury, and the Body
Introduction
Chapter Five: Anti-Judaic Rhetoric in the Vercelliand Blickling Manuscripts
Chapter Six: Anti-Judaism and Somatic Fiction
Part Four: Ælfric, Anti-Judaism, and the Tenth Century
Introduction
Chapter Seven: Ælfric’s De populo Israhel
Chapter Eight: Ælfric’s Maccabees
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE