We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
PLAYING THE WHORE: ILLICIT UNION AND THE BIBLICAL TYPOLOGY OF PROMISCUITY IN THE TOLEDOT YESHU TRADITION.
- Authors
Latteri, Natalie E.
- Abstract
Toledot Yeshu, or "Stories about Jesus," have been transmitted by Jews for centuries but only recently have begun to garner significant scholarly attention as part of a tradition of anti-Christian polemic. This paper contends that the varied depictions of Jesus' conception in the Toledot corpus reflect the intracommunal issues of forced conversion, apostasy, and over- familiarity with non-Jews. The theme was neither new to the Toledot nor a product of the late-antique and medieval contexts that Jewish stories of Jesus first circulated in. Rather, it echoes biblical representations of, and admonishments against, illicit relationships with non-Jews which ancient authors commonly depicted through a typology of sexual promiscuity. It is only when viewing Toledot presentations of Jesus' conception in light of both contemporary events and the Jewish biblical literary tradition that we are able to grasp their previously unnoted functions as 1) Jewish self-criticism regarding intercommunal relations; and, 2) a didactic warning to future generations against making similar mistakes.
- Subjects
JEWISH interpretations of Jesus Christ; CHRISTIAN-Jewish relations; BIBLICAL criticism; MARY, Blessed Virgin, Saint; PROMISCUITY; CHILDBIRTH; VIRGIN birth; RELIGION
- Publication
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, 2015, Vol 33, Issue 2, p87
- ISSN
0882-8539
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/sho.2015.0003