Maxine L. Grossman is associate professor of Jewish studies and religious studies in the Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Maryland. Her other work includes Reading for History in the Damascus Document: A Methodol
Emanuel Tov
-- Hebrew University, Jerusalem
"This remarkable book introduces a wide spectrum of approaches to
the study of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The very definition of these
approaches together with the updated analyses make this book an
absolute must for scholars and students alike." George J.
Brooke
-- University of Manchester
"Delightfully full of common sense. The essays are light on jargon
but heavy on insight, showing readers how to refresh and rephrase
their research questions within a wider interdisciplinary framework
and encouraging multiple moves beyond the parameters of traditional
higher criticism. The examples used from the Scrolls are
judiciously chosen and cover almost every literary genre. Highly
recommended for readers of the Scrolls of every generation!" Eileen
Schuller
-- McMaster University
"With the completion of the publication of the full corpus of the
Dead Sea Scrolls, there have been numerous calls in recent years to
move forward by drawing upon a wider range of methods and theories
than traditionally employed. This volume takes up that challenge.
Each of the fifteen essays not only outlines the strengths and
weaknesses of one approach or perspective but also applies it
concretely to a specific text or problem in Scrolls research. . .
These essays will be appreciated for their creativity,
interdisciplinary richness, and fresh articulation of old
questions." Loren T. Stuckenbruck
-- Princeton Theological Seminary
"Among the many collections of essays that have been published on
the Dead Sea Scrolls in recent years, this book stands out. . .
Several years from now we shall be able to recognize how much this
book charted the course of study to come." Moshe J. Bernstein
-- Yeshiva University
"This rich collection of essays succeeds in its deceptively
difficult task of addressing multiple audiences -- from beginners
in Dead Sea Scrolls study to advanced scholars in the field. . .
Offers readers an unusual opportunity to taste from the full range
of flavors that Qumran scholarship offers." Journal of Ancient
Judaism
"In the last decades, the corpus of the Dead Sea Scrolls has become
indispensable for the study of the Hebrew Bible, Second Temple, and
rabbinic Judaism. This volume makes the methodology associated with
this key textual collection easily accessible to both specialist
and a broader scholarly public alike."
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