Elizabeth Shanks Alexander is an Associate Professor of Religious Studies, teaching ancient Judaism, at the University of Virginia. She received her PhD from Yale University in 1998. She formerly taught at Smith and Haverford Colleges. Alexander received a Brandeis-Hadassah research grant for her work on this book, and is also the author of Transmitting Mishnah: The Shaping Influence of Oral Tradition (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
Inhaltsangabe
Part I. Gender and the Tannaitic Rule: 1. The rule and social reality: conceiving the category, formulating the rule 2. Between man and woman: lists of male-female difference Part II. Talmudic Interpretation and the Potential for Gender: 3. How tefillin became a positive commandment not occasioned by time 4. Shifting orthodoxies 5. From description to prescription Part III. Gender in Women's Ritual Exemptions: 6. Women's exemption from Shema and tefillin 7. Torah study as ritual 8. The fringes debate: a conclusion of sorts 9. Epilogue.
Part I. Gender and the Tannaitic Rule: 1. The rule and social reality: conceiving the category, formulating the rule 2. Between man and woman: lists of male-female difference Part II. Talmudic Interpretation and the Potential for Gender: 3. How tefillin became a positive commandment not occasioned by time 4. Shifting orthodoxies 5. From description to prescription Part III. Gender in Women's Ritual Exemptions: 6. Women's exemption from Shema and tefillin 7. Torah study as ritual 8. The fringes debate: a conclusion of sorts 9. Epilogue.
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