Prodigal Son/Elder Brother: Interpretation and Alterity in Augustine, Petrarch, Kafka, Levinas

University of Chicago Press (1991)
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Abstract

"I don't know of any other book that deals with the hermeneutical problem of the relationship between Christianity and Judaism in the way this one does. Full of cunning and unpredictable turns, Prodigal Son/Elder Brother addresses the question of the elder brother's fate by opposing two sets of readings, Christian and Jewish, ancient and modern, figural and midrashic. No one, after reading this book, will any longer connect Judaism and Christianity with a hyphen."—Gerald L. Burns, University of Notre Dame "Through a creative reading of the prodigal son parable, Jill Robbins demonstrates the hermeneutical impasse of the Christian exegete who must and yet cannot incorporate the Old Testament. Having disclosed the aporia at the heart of Christian hermeneutics, she proposes an alternative approach to the Hebrew Bible and new interpretations of Augustine, Petrarch, Kafka, and Levinas. Robbins brilliantly integrates the discourses of biblical texts, literary works, and critical analysis."—Mark C. Taylor, Williams College.

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Citations of this work

Emmanuel Levinas.Bettina Bergo - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Aesthetic Negation and Citation: Levinas, Agnon and the Paradox of Literature.Lawrence Harvey - 2021 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 13 (2):114-124.
Old ideas in a new setting.Inge Siegumfeldt - 1996 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 17 (1-2):109-117.

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