Interpretation as a Generator of Religious Law: A Comparative Perspective

[RG # 140]  Interpretation as a Generator of Religious Law: A Comparative Perspective

Sept. 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015

Organizers:

Rami Reiner (Ben Gurion University)
Vered Noam (Tel Aviv University)

Interpretation plays a pivotal role in the making of law, occasionally an act of its very construction. Recent scholarship has applied various hermeneutical theories to the study of authoritative legal-theological texts, and noted the impacts that post-modern approaches to interpretation may have on their investigation.

Our research group is a joint venture to explore the potential of research into the relations between the interpretive dimension and the development of Jewish tradition, from the first centuries CE up until the Middle Ages, against the broad background of similar problems and challenges with which scholars of other religious cultures (such as early Christianity, early Islam, and Hinduism) grapple. The group consists of four scholars of Jewish exegetical literature, one who is additionally an expert in jurisprudence at large, and three who are engaged in the research of law and exegesis in early Christianity, Islam and Hindu philosophy and literature. The group will examine the relationship between the exegetical and the legislative viewpoints in this wide scope of cultures and eras, both diachronically and synchronically, both as a literary and as an ideational phenomenon.

 

 

Members

fellow

Rami Reiner

FELLOW
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Rami Reiner is Professor at the Goldstein-Goren International Center for Jewish Thought at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. His research interests are the history of Halakhah and Talmud exegesis in medieval Europe, together with the social history of the Jewish communities in this region.

fellow

Heeraman Tiwari

FELLOW
Jawaharlal Nehru University

Heeraman Tiwari is Senior Assistant Professor in the Centre for Historical Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Research interests include Indian Philosophy, the intellectual history of early and medieval India, and Sanskrit language and literature.

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