Rabbinic Inferno: Hell and Salvation in Classical Judaism
FAIN: FT-270797-20
Dov Yehuda Weiss
Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois (Champaign, IL 61801-3620)
Writing a chapter of a book on Jewish understandings of hell and the afterlife in the classical rabbinic era (70-700 CE).
In 1885, the leading Rabbis of American Reform Judaism declared that “we reject as ideas not rooted in Judaism, the belief … [in] Gehenna (hell).” As a Google search of the words “Judaism” and “hell” reveal, there is a widespread assumption today that traditional Judaism rejects the existence of fiery torments in the afterlife. Arguing that these attitudes misrepresent the history of Judaism, Rabbinic Inferno: Hell in Classical Judaism produces the first scholarly book on afterlife retribution in the rabbinic era (70-700 CE). Rather than absent in classical Jewish discourse, or occupying its periphery, hell played a central role in classical Jewish literature and culture. Rabbinic Inferno uses ancient Jewish discourse about hell -- as it emerges in rabbinic biblical interpretation -- to unearth the distinctive anxieties, values, aesthetics, fantasies, and hopes within classical Jewish culture. Without such analysis, our understanding of Judaism remains incomplete.