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The Talmud and the Internet : a journey…
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The Talmud and the Internet : a journey between worlds (original 2000; edition 2000)

by Jonathan Rosen

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2591104,056 (3.23)1
In his personal meditation on the relationship between the ancient, continuing tradition of the Talmud and the expanding world of the Internet Jonathan Rosen blends memoir, history and literary reflection. In the loose, associative logic and the vastness of each, he discovers not merely the disruption of a broken world but a kind of disjointed harmony. In the same way that the Talmud helped Jews survive after the destruction of the Temple by making Jewish culture portable and personal, the all-inclusive Internet serves a world that is both more uprooted and more connected than before.… (more)
Member:melsmarsh
Title:The Talmud and the Internet : a journey between worlds
Authors:Jonathan Rosen
Info:New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000.
Collections:Your library, Currently reading, To read
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Tags:Judaism, tbr

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The Talmud and the Internet: A Journey between Worlds by Jonathan Rosen (2000)

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"I have always known that writing overtly about the horrors of the Holocaust is beyond my abilities and beyond my ambition and perhaps even beyond what I feel art can accomplish. For me the challenge, as a writer and perhaps even as a person, is how to do justice to the lives and experiences of both my grandmothers; the woman who died at ninety-five surrounded by family members who loved her, and the woman murdered in the forest in Eastern Europe. But perhaps even that is saying too much. Perhaps it is only to do justice to my own experience as the grandchild of those two women. A grandchild of optimistic America and of tragic European experience."

A little book has never convinced me to convert as much as this one... ( )
  Eavans | Feb 17, 2023 |
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In his personal meditation on the relationship between the ancient, continuing tradition of the Talmud and the expanding world of the Internet Jonathan Rosen blends memoir, history and literary reflection. In the loose, associative logic and the vastness of each, he discovers not merely the disruption of a broken world but a kind of disjointed harmony. In the same way that the Talmud helped Jews survive after the destruction of the Temple by making Jewish culture portable and personal, the all-inclusive Internet serves a world that is both more uprooted and more connected than before.

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