Click here here to sign up for the Schocken e-newsletter and automatically enter a contest to win a copy of the newest addition to Schocken/Nextbook’s Jewish Encounters series. Already selected as one of the “Best Books of 2009″ by Publishers Weekly, RASHI, by Nobel Peace Prize winning author Elie Wiesel, introduces us to the towering figure of Rashi—Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki—the great biblical and Talmudic commentator of the Middle Ages.
Both beginners and advanced students of the Bible rely on Rashi’s groundbreaking commentary for simple text explanations and Midrashic interpretations. Wiesel, a descendant of Rashi, proves an incomparable guide who enables us to appreciate both the lucidity of Rashi’s writings and the milieu in which they were formed.
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More >Dr. Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg, noted Torah scholar, author, and speaker, was awarded a Maurice N. Eisendrath Bearer of Light Award — the highest honor bestowed by the Reform Movement.
More >Rashi has been selected as one of the Best Books of 2009 by Publishers Weekly.
More >Watch Melvin Konner discuss his book, The Jewish Body , in this video about the history of the Jewish people from bris to burial, from muscle Jews to nose jobs.
More >“Some thinkers are influential, a few create schools, a very few characterize a period… it is possible that just as we speak of the age of Aquinas or of Goethe, later ages will speak of our time as the age of Levi-Strauss… he is a maker of the modern mind.” -James Redfield
In Myth and Meaning one of the twentieth century’s most prominent thinkers, Claude Lévi-Strauss, who died Friday, a month short of his 101st birthday, offers the insights of a lifetime on the crucial questions of human existence. Responding to questions as varied as ‘Can there be meaning in chaos?’, ‘What can science learn from myth?’ and ‘What is structuralism?’, Lévi-Strauss presents, in clear, precise language, essential guidance for those who want to learn more about the potential of the human mind.
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More >Here is the stirring story of how Hebrew was rescued from the fate of a dead language to become the living tongue of a modern nation.
Watch this video about Ilan Stavans’ book Resurrecting Hebrew.
More >“David Lehman’s A Fine Romance wittily explores the enormous contribution of Jewish writers and composers to the American musical scene. Lehman finds Jewish influence, or what he calls ‘a plaintive undertow,’ even in such unlikely upbeat anthems as Gershwin’s ‘Love Walked In.’ His love-struck history is itself a major entertainment.”
John Ashbery, author of Three Poems
Watch this video trailer for A Fine Romance by acclaimed poet, anthologist, and cultural critic, David Lehman.
More >From 1942 to 1944, twelve thousand children passed through the Theresienstadt internment camp, near Prague, on their way to Auschwitz. Only a few hundred of them survived the war. In The Girls of Room 28, ten of these children—mothers and grandmothers today in their seventies—tell us how they did it.
More >Jewish Body Week celebrates The Jewish Body by Melvin Konner, part of Schocken and Nextbook’s Jewish Encounters book series. Partnering with a wide variety of cultural institutions in NYC, Washington, D.C. and San Francisco – Nextbook’s Jewish Body Week offers a diverse slate of events for people of every age. Dance. Art. Food. Conversation. October 18–25, 2009.
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