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Full Description
From
one of the most innovative and acclaimed biblical commentators at work
today, here is a revolutionary analysis of the intersection between
religion and psychoanalysis in the stories of the men and women of the
Bible.
For centuries scholars and rabbis have wrestled with
the biblical narrative, attempting to answer the questions that arise
from a plain reading of the text. In The Murmuring Deep, Avivah
Zornberg informs her literary analysis of the text with concepts drawn
from Freud, Winnicott, Laplanche, and other psychoanalytic thinkers to
give us a new understanding of the desires and motivations of the men
and women whose stories form the basis of the Bible. Through close
readings of the biblical and midrashic texts, Zornberg makes a powerful
argument for the idea that the creators of the midrashic commentary,
the medieval rabbinic commentators, and the Hassidic commentators were
themselves on some level aware of the complex interplay between
conscious and unconscious levels of experience and used this knowledge
in their interpretations.
In her analysis of the stories of
Adam and Eve, Noah, Jonah, Abraham, Rebecca, Isaac, Joseph and his
brothers, Ruth, and Esther–how they communicated with the world around
them, with God, and with the various parts of their selves–Zornberg
offers fascinating insights into the interaction between consciousness
and unconsciousness. In discussing why God has to “seduce” Adam into
entering the Garden of Eden or why Jonah thinks he can hide from God by
getting on a ship, Zornberg enhances our appreciation of the Bible as
the foundational text in our quest to understand what it means to be
human.
Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg is the author of The Beginning of Desire: Reflections on Genesis, for which she received the National Jewish Book Award, and The Particulars of Rapture: Reflections on Exodus.
She was born in London and received a Ph.D. in English literature from
Cambridge University. She lectures widely in Israel, the United States,
Canada, and the United Kingdom. She lives and teaches in Jerusalem.
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