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SubmissionsZeramim: An Online Journal of Applied Jewish Thought presents a call for papers for a special issue on Why Medieval MattersIn his 2010 publication, Reassessing Jewish Life in Medieval Europe,[1] Robert Chazan asserted that one of the “areas of Jewish achievement in medieval western Christendom” that “benefited Jewish life” during the transition to modernity was the medieval “experience as a beleaguered minority, inured to extensive pressure for abandonment of Jewish identity and equipped with the capacity to resist such pressures.”[2] Chazan further asserted that the arguments in favor of adherence to Judaism that were thus developed during the medieval period “continued to move modern Jews” as well.[3] Do those medieval arguments and understandings, however, still ‘work' today, in our post-‘modern'[4] environment? Is there anything in the medieval Jewish achievements that still matter today, and that can still be an inspiration going forward? For our next special issue, accordingly, we would like to consider whether, and if so how, medieval Jewish thought, and/or lived experience, might provide resources for the challenges facing ‘liberal' forms of Judaism today (i.e., all forms that do not simply ‘stop,' in effect, with the Shulchan Arukh and the Chatam Sofer), particularly in the United States, but also in Israel. In short—why medieval matters? By ‘medieval,' we start around 700 CE—recognizing, from recent studies of the ‘Rabbinic' period, that general acceptance (i.e., by the ‘masses') of the halakhic lifestyle portrayed/imagined in the Babylonian Talmud did not occur until the Geonic/Genizah period.[5] We end, for this purpose, the ‘medieval' period at around the late 17th Century—viewing Shabbetai Zevi as the ‘last medieval,' and Spinoza as the ‘first modern.'[6] Also, while Chazan focused on ‘Western' or ‘Latin' Europe, we hope that our contributors will also give some consideration to the communities of Babylonia, Yemen, North Africa, Spain and ‘Eastern Europe,' albeit within the foregoing time parameters. (Cf. Gotein's note that ‘business law' was a ‘live' issue in Egypt during the Genizah period, in contrast to the situation in Ashkenaz—and so required a group of lay-persons with ‘practical Jewish' learning to act as judges.[7]) Examples of recent arguments in regard to ‘why medieval matters' that we (the editors) found interesting, and hope will be pursued, include: (a) Robert Harris's discussions of the values implicit in the peshat commentaries of Rashi's students;[8] (b) David Biale's suggestion that modern ‘Jewish secular' thought should be understood as characteristically Jewish, insofar as it engages dialectically, and productively, with medieval Jewish thought,[9] and (c) Heidi Ravven's contention that a return to the holistic approach of Greek philosophy, as preserved by Maimonides, is a necessary antidote to Augustine's break with Greek tradition, as followed by Kant and others—whereby Augustine focused instead on the ‘will' of the ‘individual.'[10] * * * William Faulkner famously asserted: “The past is never dead. It's not even past.”[11] For many of us, however, the medieval world is indeed, “past,” and of seemingly no relevance to the challenges facing thoughtful Jews trying to lead meaningfully Jewish lives in today's context. Perhaps indeed ‘medieval Jewish studies' is just a form of antiquarianism—surely as worthy an object of study as any other historical episode, but of no practical ‘relevance,' except for filling-up space on the timeline of Jewish development. The editors of this journal remain uncertain as to the answer, notwithstanding Chazan's confidence, as quoted above. We look forward, accordingly, to learning from our (anticipated) contributors, and to sharing that learning with our readers. [1] William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun (1951), Act. 1, Scene 3. [1] Robert Chazan, Reassessing Jewish Life in Medieval Europe (New York: Cambridge U.P., 2010). [2] Ibid., pp. 236–237. The other “areas of Jewish achievement” listed by Chazan were:
General Submission GuidelinesContent Zeramim welcomes the submission of essays in any subject of applied Jewish studies—articles analyzing subjects of Jewish inquiry that offer a unique lens on any aspect of Jewish life or thought that affects the present and/or future of how Jewish culture, religion, and/or people operate in the modern world.Style Submissions should be intellectually informed by and informative of current understandings in Jewish academia, referencing recent studies. Any terminology or abbreviations likely to be unfamiliar to non-specialists should be succinctly clarified in the article itself. Submissions should be accessible to a lay readership and helpful to professional academics and/or Jewish professsionals; an ideal submission should be able to bring a nuanced exploration of a subject to a diversity of readers.Gendered Terminology Gendered pronouns for entities that might be either without gender (e.g., “God Himself”) or not necessarily restricted to one gender (e.g., “a scholar should doubt himself”) should only be used if the author intends to convey a point about gender by identifying a gender in such situations. Likewise, gender-neutral nouns (e.g., “humanity”) are encouraged instead of gender-exclusive nouns (e.g., “mankind”) unless a point about gender is intended to be conveyed by using gender-exclusive terminology. Zeramim encourages gender-neutral language (e.g., “God's self”) and gender-inclusive language (e.g., “a scholar should doubt himself or herself”); we ask our authors to be sensitive to the assumptions involved in such usages and how our readers will perceive those assumptions.Length Submissions may be no longer than 10,000 words.Citation All articles should include their notes in the form of footnotes (i.e., not endnotes). Zeramim does not publish appendices of cited sources. Authors may base their style of citation in any recognized methodology of citation (MLA, Chicago, Manual of Style, etc.) so long as the (not comprehensive) guidelines below are met:
Languages Submissions should be in English but may integrate terms and passages from non-English languages as long as the foreign language text is trans-lated into English. Key characters, terms or phrases in languages written with characters other than those of the Latin alphabet (e.g., Hebrew, Greek, Arabic, etc.) should appear in transliteration (and—if able to assist a reader—their native spellings). Authors may follow any system of transliteration (e.g., SBL, Library of Congress, Encyclopaedia Judaica, etc.) but should be consistent within a single submission.Biography Every submission should include a 2-5-sentence biography of any and all of its authors.Submitting All submissions must be submitted to [email protected] as .docx files, and all appendices to articles must be part of the same document submitted for consideration.Special Guidelines for Submissions to Midrash ZeramimMidrash Zeramim is a designated venue for publication of creative works that make use of artistic forms to illuminate ideas relevant to thoughtful Jewish lives—whether in the form of visual arts, creative writing or music. Submissions for Midrash Zeramim, though artistic in nature, should include an introductory statement that addresses the point that the submission seeks to make and refers the reader/listener/observer to relevant sources that inspired the contribution and may provide further thought. For all other matters related to style and format, please see the General Submission Guidelines above. |
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