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Isaac Luria and Jewish Mystical Hagiography

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Offers a compelling new approach to this enigmatic figure in Jewish mysticism.Rabbi Isaac Luria (1534–1572) was an extraordinary figure in the Jewish mystical tradition. His public career in Safed,...
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  • 01 December 2026
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Offers a compelling new approach to this enigmatic figure in Jewish mysticism.

Rabbi Isaac Luria (1534–1572) was an extraordinary figure in the Jewish mystical tradition. His public career in Safed, the center of kabbalistic innovation in the sixteenth century, lasted only two years and two weeks (June 1570–July 1572). In this short interval, however, his personality and his supernatural knowledge helped to establish him as the most consequential figure in the midst of a large number of scholars and mystics. He left behind very few writings, but many stories about his abilities and knowledge began to circulate during his lifetime, and they were collected and transmitted both orally and in writing by his disciples and published many years later. For instance, he was said to be able to commune with the soul of Rabbi Simeon ben Yohai, the purported author of the Zohar, and receive new interpretations from him. He could also tell a person about their earlier transmigrations and for what sins they needed atonement. He was visited by and studied with Elijah the prophet, and at night his soul ascended to the heavenly academies to study and receive revelations while he slept. This book is a study of how these and other stories about Luria coalesced into the first hagiographical biography in the kabbalistic tradition and became the template for later Jewish hagiographies. It also includes annotated English translations of three key texts: Shloimel Dresnitz's letters as they were published in Delmedigo's Ta'alumot Hokhmah; Benayahu's Toldot ha-AR"I; and the Yiddish translation from Ma'aseh ha-Shem.

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Price: £86.50
Pages: 176
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Publication Date: 01 December 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9798855810462
Format: Hardcover
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"The scholarship here is world-class, covering both contemporary and past central figures in the field of Kabbalah. I can't recall this material having been presented, in English, with such elegance and coherence. This will be of interest to scholars of Jewish studies, comparative mysticism, and history of religions, as well as enthusiasts of Kabbalah and popular Judaism more broadly." — Pinchas Giller, author of Kabbalah: A Guide for the Perplexed

"This important book offers a twofold contribution to the field. First, it traces the emergence and development of hagiography as a discrete literary and theological genre of Jewish cultural activity. Second, it presents in translation a wealth of important historical sources that have hitherto remained accessible only to specialists with advanced language training. The result is a compelling new way of thinking about the enigmatic figure at the heart of this sixteenth-century renaissance of Jewish mysticism." — Ariel Evan Mayse, author of Laws of the Spirit: Ritual, Mysticism, and the Commandments in Early Hasidism

Morris M. Faierstein is an independent scholar. He is the author, editor, and translator of many books, including The Dybbuk: Its Origins and History, also published by SUNY Press; The Early Modern Yiddish Bible: From the Mirkevet ha-Mishneh to Blitz and Witzenhausen; and Truth Sprouts from the Earth: The Teachings of Rabbi Menahem Mendel of Kotsk.