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Hebrew literature
(redirected from Hebrew Writings)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.10 sec.
Hebrew literature, literary works, from ancient to modern, written in the Hebrew language.

Early Literature

The great monuments of the earliest period of Hebrew literature are the Old Testament Old Testament, Christian name for the Hebrew Bible, which serves as the first division of the Christian Bible (see New Testament ). The designations "Old" and "New" seem to have been adopted after c.A.D.
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 and the Apocrypha 1)); First and Second Maccabees ; the Prayer of Manasses (see Manasseh ). All are included in the Septuagint , with the exception of 2 Esdras=4 Ezra. However, they were not included in the Hebrew canon (ratified c.A.D. 100).
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. Parts of the Pseudepigrapha Pseudepigrapha (s'dĭpĭ`grəfə) [Gr.
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 and of the Dead Sea Scrolls Dead Sea Scrolls, ancient leather and papyrus scrolls first discovered in 1947 in caves on the NW shore of the Dead Sea. Most of the documents were written or copied between the 1st cent. B.C. and the first half of the 1st cent. A.D.
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 were also produced before the conquest of Judaea by Titus. The literature of the Jews developed mainly in the Hebrew language, although there were also works in Greek, Aramaic, and Arabic.

In the 2d cent. A.D. began the Talmudic period, which lasted well into the 6th cent. In these centuries the great anonymous encyclopedic work of religious and civil law, the Talmud Talmud (tăl`məd) [Aramaic from Heb.
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, was compiled, edited, and interpreted. The Midrash Midrash (mĭd`räsh) [Heb.
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—a collection of halakah halakah or halacha (both: hälä`khä, häläkhä`) [Heb.
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 (found also in the Talmud) and haggadic material—likewise forms part of the Hebrew literature of that period. In the 4th cent. the Targum Targum (tär`gəm) [Aramaic,=translation], Aramaic paraphrase of the Hebrew Bible.
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 to the Pentateuch and to the Prophets was finished. The 6th and 7th cent. saw the development of the Masora Masora or Massorah (məsō`rə) [Heb.
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 in Palestine. In Babylonia meanwhile many valuable additions to Hebrew literature were made by the Gaonim Gaonim (gāō`nĭm) [Heb.
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 after the 6th cent.

Medieval Literature

Commentaries on the Talmud and haggadic material continued to be written until the 11th cent., when the Babylonian academies were suppressed and the center of Jewish literary activity shifted to Spain. France and Germany became the main centers of Talmudic commentary. In Spain, and to some extent in Italy, Hebrew literature flourished for centuries. The finest work was accomplished in the realms of poetry—influenced by Arab and Indian literature—and philosophy. Philology, exegesis, and codification also flourished. By the 14th cent. the largely Aramaic mystical treatise, the Zohar, had appeared—the masterpiece of a flourishing literature of Jewish mysticism (see kabbalah kabbalah or cabala (both: kăb`ələ) [Heb.
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).

Famous scholars and authors of Hebrew literature in the Middle Ages included Aha of Shabcha Aha of Shabcha (ä`hä, shäb`khä) or Achai of Shabcha
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, Saadia ben Joseph al-Fayumi Saadia ben Joseph al-Fayumi (sä`dēä, äl-fīy
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, Dunash ben Tamim Dunash ben Tamim (d
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, Dunash ben Labrat Dunash ben Labrat (d
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, Gershom ben Judah Gershom ben Judah (gr`shəm bĕn j`də), c.965–c.
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, Al-Fasi Al-Fasi, Isaac ben Jacob ha-Kohen (äl-fä`sē)
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, Solomon ben Judah Ibn Gabirol Ibn Gabirol, Solomon ben Judah (ĭ`bən gäbē`rôl), c.
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, Rashi Rashi (rä`shē), 1040–1105, Jewish exegete, grammarian, and legal authority, b. Troyes, France.
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, Judah ha-Levi Judah ha-Levi or Judah Halevy (both: j
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, Abraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra Ibn Ezra, Abraham ben Meir (mâr), c.1089–1164, Jewish grammarian, commentator, poet, philosopher, and astronomer, b. Tudela, Spain.
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, Maimonides Maimonides (mīmŏn`ĭdēz) or Moses ben Maimon
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, Immanuel ben Solomon Immanuel ben Solomon, c.1265–c.1330, Hebrew-Italian poet and scholar, b. Rome. He wrote biblical criticism and, in both Hebrew and Italian, satiric verse and lively stories.
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, Isaac Abravanel Abravanel or Abarbanel, Isaac
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, and Joseph ben Ephraim Caro Caro or Karo, Joseph ben Ephraim (kä`rō)
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. In the persecutions following the Crusades, when the Jews were driven from country to country, they clung to their literature—which leaned increasingly to mysticism and asceticism—and especially to the Hebrew Bible.

Beginnings of Modern Hebrew Literature

On the threshold of the transition from the old isolated life to a wider one was the poet Moses Hayyim Luzzatto Luzzatto, Moses Hayyim (hä`yēm l
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—a contemporary of the Gaon of Vilna, Elijah ben Solomon Elijah ben Solomon, 1720–97, Jewish scholar, called the Gaon of Vilna, b. Lithuania. A leading Jewish scholar of his time, he opposed the spread of Hasidism in Lithuania and Poland because he feared that the creation of these new groups would weaken the Jewish
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—but the modern period of Hebrew literature really began with Moses Mendelssohn Mendelssohn, Moses, 1729–86, German-Jewish philosopher; grandfather of Jakob Ludwig Felix Mendelssohn . He was a leader in the movement for cultural assimilation.
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. While Nachman Krochmal Krochmal, Nachman (näkh`män krôkh`mäl), 1785–1840, Jewish secular historian and writer, b. Galicia.
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 and Shloime Ansky Ansky, Shloime (shloi`mə än`skē) pseud.
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 (Solomon Seinwel Rapoport) were contributing to biblical criticism and historical scholarship, writers such as Peretz (Peter) Smolenskin Smolenskin, Perez (pĕr`ĕts smōlĕn`skĭn), c.1842–1885, Russian novelist and essayist who wrote in Hebrew.
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 were devoting themselves to Haskalah, or literature of enlightenment, intended to shake the Jews of Central Europe from their medieval attitudes. Other important figures of the period are the scholar Joseph Halévy, the poet Jehuda (Leon) Gordon Gordon, Judah Leon, 1830–92, Russian-Hebrew novelist and poet, b. Vilna. As teacher and writer he was one of the leaders in the renaissance of a progressive culture among the Jews (see Haskalah ) and he was an indefatigable foe of obscurantism.
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, and the novelist Solomon Yakob Abramovich, whose pseudonym was Mendele mocher sforim Mendele mocher sforim [Yid.= Mendele the book peddler] (mĕn`dələ môkh`ər sfô`rĭm), pseud.
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.

Zionism and Literature in Israel

The rise of Zionism Zionism, modern political movement for reconstituting a Jewish national state in Palestine.

Early Years



The rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th cent.
..... Click the link for more information. , particularly reflected in the writings of Ahad Ha-am Ahad Ha-am (äkhäd` hä-äm) [Heb.,=One of the People], 1856–1927, Jewish thinker and Zionist leader, b. Ukraine.
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 (Asher Ginzberg), gave Hebrew literature fresh impetus, and Palestine became again the center of publication in Hebrew. Hebrew was proclaimed the national language of the Jews even before the establishment (1948) of the state of Israel. The two great poets of modern Hebrew literature are Hayyim Nahman Bialik Bialik, Hayyim Nahman (hī`yəm nä`mən byä`lēk)
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 and Saul Tchernihovsky Tchernihovsky, Saul (chərnəhôf`skē), 1873–1943, Russian poet who wrote in Hebrew. He was a practicing physician.
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, who was strongly influenced by ancient Greek literature. The poetry of Abraham Shlonsky, Lea Goldberg, and Nathan Alterman deals with social and political themes.

Among the many writers of prose are Joseph H. Brenner, who described Jewish life in Eastern Europe and pioneer life in Palestine, and Salman Shneur, who wrote of the simple and uneducated Jews. The Nobel laureate S. Y. Agnon Agnon, S. Y. (Shmuel Yosef Agnon) (shm
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 portrayed the Eastern European milieu and pioneer life in Palestine; his works have become classics in modern Hebrew epic literature. Hebrew writers who are native to Israel seek inspiration in the classical Hebrew past or in the new life of Israel. The most outstanding writer of this group is Moshe Shamir, who in his two novels—one depicting a Hasmonean king and the other dealing with the Arab-Israeli War of 1948—gave new dimensions to Hebrew fiction.

Aron David Gordon (1856–1922) was one of the greatest social and political essayists of Hebrew literature; significant Hebrew language literary critics include David Frishman (1861–1922) and Yosef Klausner (1874–1958). In recent years the Israeli novelists Amos Oz Oz, Amos, 1939–, Israeli writer, b. Jerusalem as Amos Klausner. As a teenager he changed his name to Oz, Hebrew for "strength." A former kibbutz member, Israeli soldier, and schoolteacher, he is is one of Israel's major novelists.
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, Abraham B. Yehoshua, and Aharon Appelfeld, and the poet Yehuda Amichai have been widely translated and have achieved international distinction. Outside Israel, the writing of the Jews is ordinarily in the language of the countries in which they live or in Yiddish Yiddish language (yĭd`ĭsh)
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, whose literary use developed rapidly after the middle of the 19th cent.

Bibliography

See N. Kravitz, Three Thousand Years of Hebrew Literature (1972); T. Carmi, ed., The Penguin Book of Hebrew Verse (1981); M. Neiman, A Century of Modern Hebrew Literary Criticism, 1784–1884 (1983); B. Holtz, ed., Back to the Sources (1984); R. Alter, The Invention of Hebrew Prose (1988).



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