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Caracteristicile produsului All Consuming: Germans, Jews, and
- Brand: John M. Efron
- Categoria: History
- Magazin: libris.ro
- Ultima actualizare: 05-06-2025 16:21:01
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Descriere magazin:
A captivating 700-year history of meat at the intersection of German and Jewish culture, uniquely illuminating the rich, fraught, and tragic history of German Jewry. In Judaism, meat is of paramount importance as it constitutes the very focal point of the dietary laws. With an intricate set of codified regulations concerning forbidden and permissible meats, highly prescribed methods of butchering, and elaborate rules governing consumption, meat is one of the most visible, and gustatory, markers of Jewish distinctness and social separation. It is an object of tangible, touchable, and tastable difference like no other. In All
Consuming,
John M.
Efron shows that
Germans have identified, thought about, studied, decried, and gladly eaten meat understood to be Jewish to an extent not seen elsewhere in Europe. Expressions of this engagement are found across the cultural landscape--in literature, sculpture, and visual arts--and evident in legal codes and commercial enterprises. Likewise,
Jews in Germany have vigorously defended their meats and the culture and rituals surrounding them by educating
Germans and
Jews alike about their meaning and relevance. In a capacious narrative extending from from the Middle Ages to today,
Efron goes far beyond a discussion of dietary laws and ritual slaughter. Ranging through a network of moral, aesthetic, and political ideas, and an archive that frequently defies expectations, All
Consuming is a tour de force in culinary and cultural history, transforming not only our understanding of German-Jewish identity, but Jewish and Christian religious sensibilities, and the vicissitudes of religious freedom for Germany\'s minority populations. In Judaism, meat is of paramount importance as it constitutes the very focal point of the dietary laws. With an intricate set of codified regulations concerning forbidden and permissible meats, highly prescribed methods of killing, and elaborate rules governing consumption, meat is one of the most visible, and gustatory, markers of Jewish distinctness and social separation. It is an object of tangible, touchable, and tastable difference like no other. In All
Consuming, historian
John M.
Efron focuses on the contested culture of meat and its role in the formation of ethnic identities in Germany. To an extent not seen elsewhere in Europe,
Germans have identified, thought about, studied, decried, and gladly eaten meat understood to be Jewish. Expressions of this engagement are found across the c