Ebook: Foreigners and Their Food: Constructing Otherness in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Law
Author: David M. Freidenreich
- Tags: Bibles, Bible Covers, Bible Study & Reference, Biographies, Catholicism, Children’s & Teens, Christian Denominations & Sects, Christian Living, Churches & Church Leadership, Education, History, Literature & Fiction, Ministry & Evangelism, Protestantism, Romance, Theology, Worship & Devotion, Jewish, Holocaust, World, History, Islam, Hadith, History, Law, Mecca, Muhammed, Quran, Rituals & Practice, Shi’ism, Sufism, Sunnism, Theology, Women in Islam, Religion & Spirituality, Judaism, Haggadah, Hasidism, History, Holidays, Jewish Lif
- Year: 2011
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Language: English
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Foreigners and Their Food explores how Jews, Christians, and Muslims conceptualize us” and them” through rules about the preparation of food by adherents of other religions and the act of eating with such outsiders. David M. Freidenreich analyzes the significance of food to religious formation, elucidating the ways ancient and medieval scholars use food restrictions to think about the other.” Freidenreich illuminates the subtly different ways Jews, Christians, and Muslims perceive themselves, and he demonstrates how these distinctive self-conceptions shape ideas about religious foreigners and communal boundaries. This work, the first to analyze change over time across the legal literatures of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, makes pathbreaking contributions to the history of interreligious intolerance and to the comparative study of religion.
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