By
– December 12, 2011
If you have ever puzzled over Marc Chagall’s incorporation of the crucified Jesus into his paintings, or wondered at Scholem Asch’s positive interpretations of Jesus in his stories, this monograph is for you. These two figures are among the many discussed from the late 18th to early 20th century, with special focus on Yiddish modernism in the pre-Shoah period of the 1920’s to 30’s. In case after case, Hoffman explains how the various conflicts facing these authors and artists were re-interpreted in terms of Jesus in ways that were profoundly Jewish while simultaneously challenging both traditional Christian anti-Jewish representations of him and his teachings, and traditional Jewish responses. Jewish suffering at the hands of Christians, legitimated by appeals to Jesus, are shown to be wanting in view of a Jesus whose own suffering was likewise that of a paradigmatic Jewish martyr. Many did not agree with the wisdom of this strategy, and Hoffman presents their voices too.
Mark D. Nanos, Ph.D., University of Kansas, is the author of Mysteryof Romans, winner of the 1996 National Jewish Book Award, Charles H. RevsonAward in Jewish-Christian Relations.