Visual Judaism in Late Antiquity Historical Contexts of Jewish Art Lee I. Levine

Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
15 Jan 2013
ISBN:
9780300100891
Dimensions:
576 pages: 254 x 177 x 46mm
Illustrations:
128 black-&-white illustrations

A new type of Jewish art emerged in Late Antiquity, when artists produced visual depictions that had not existed earlier within a Jewish context - figural images (including pagan motifs), biblical scenes, and religious symbols. "Visual Judaism" locates this phenomenon in the wider context of Late Antiquity, revealing new insights into the role of visual culture in Jewish society, in which individual communities determined what forms of artistic expression would be displayed in their synagogues. Following introductory chapters surveying Jewish art over fifteen hundred years, down to the third century CE, author Lee I. Levine focuses on the wealth of archaeological, artistic, and textual material from the third to seventh centuries, demonstrating how this artistic activity responded to new historical circumstances.

Lee I. Levine is professor emeritus of the Rev. Moses Bernard Lauterman Family Chair in Classical Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has published numerous books, including The Ancient Synagogue: The First Thousand Years (Yale).

"Unique in its breadth and comprehensiveness. This book is the summation of decades of research in archaeology and history of the ancient Jewish world, which author Lee Levine, as a senior scholar in this field, is able to deliver from a position of erudition and authority."--Sacha Stern, University College, London, author of "Time and Process in Ancient Judaism"--Sacha Stern