Abstract
While histories of ideas in premodern perspectives habitually understood history as divisions of fixed periods, modernists tend to narrate these histories in terms of flowing streams curving through timelines, intersections, and junctions. Crucial moments, accordingly, are turns and returns, shifts and orientations. I am not sure what it takes to diagnose and proclaim an intellectual turn or how to affirm or refute such a phenomenon, but I take the audacious risk and argue that the last couple of decades have seen a “legal turn” in the study of religions—a renewed focus on legal aspects of religion that includes legal concepts, theories, and practices.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Biblical Law and Rabbinic Literature;The Cambridge Companion to Law in the Hebrew Bible;2024-04-18
2. The Legacy of Biblical Law;The Cambridge Companion to Law in the Hebrew Bible;2024-04-18
3. The Seduction of Law: Rethinking Legal Studies in Jewish Studies;Jewish Quarterly Review;2019