Parody in Jewish Literature /
Follows the development of the parody in Jewish literature from its rudiments in the Talmudic literature through its various ramifications down to its extended use.
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York, NY :
Columbia University Press,
[1907]
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Frontmatter
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I. History of Parody in Jewish Literature
- I. The Beginnings of Parody in Jewish Literature
- II. Parody in Provence and in Italy in the 14th. Century
- III. The Decline of Parody From the Middle of the 14th. Century to the Middle of the 17th.
- IV. The Revival of Parody from the Middle of the 17th. Century to the Close of the 18th.
- V. Parody from the Beginning of the 19th. Century to the Present Day
- Part II. Studies in Jewish Parody
- I. The Massekheth Purim, Sepher Habakbuk Ha- Nabhi and Megillath Setharim
- II. Provençal Parodies of the 14th. and 15 th. Centuries
- III. The Verses Against Gamblers Ascribed to Ibn Ezra and the Parody of Leon de Modena
- IV. Parody of a Letter of Credentials
- V. The Haggadah of Jonah Rapa
- VI. The Sedher Pesah Wehilkhatho
- VII. The Massekheth Purim of the Seventeenth Century
- VIII. Liturgic Parodies of the 17th. Century
- IX. The Burlesque Testaments of Polido and Colorni
- X. Earliest Yiddish Parodies
- XI. The Massekheth Derekh Ere, of Isaac Luzzatto
- XII. The Laws for Creditor and Debtor of Zachariah Pugliese
- XIII. The Satire for Purim of Judah Loeb Bensew
- XIV. Descriptive Bibliography of the Parodies from the Beginning of the 19th. Century to the Present Day
- Additions to the Bibliography
- Additions and Corrections
- Indexes