‘In this exceptional book, Monika Amsler offers a new account of the Babylonian Talmud that centers the material dimensions of information technology and textual organization in Mediterranean antiquity. Amsler integrates a capacious range of sources from throughout Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean, spanning roughly from the first to sixth centuries CE, in order to locate rabbinic knowledge production in a broader - and often neglected - context. Amsler demonstrates exceptional command of a wide range of sources and contexts, combined with a keen sensitivity to the material and social dimensions of late ancient knowledge. The result is no less than an insightful and innovative reconceptualization of rabbinic literature.’
Jeremiah Coogan - Assistant Professor of New Testament, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley, CA
‘This is an important, provocative, and challenging book. Amsler asks us to set aside what we think we know about the creation of the Babylonian Talmud and to begin again. From information collection, to filing and indexing, to the construction of arguments, Amsler situates the Talmud within the world of book production in the Roman world, and in particular within the production of large compendia in late antiquity, and in the techniques for arrangement and juxtaposition that were essential to literate, rhetorical education.’
Hayim Lapin - Professor of History and Robert H. Smith Professor of Jewish Studies, University of Maryland
‘Amsler has succeeded very well in making literary methods of classical late antiquity fruitful for the understanding of the Bavli, demonstrating the application of comparable methods in the excerpting of writings, the cataloguing of excerpts and their use in the creation of such a work. The textual example she has chosen illustrates this very well and is very instructive; there is much to learn from A.'s approach to the composition of many passages in the Bavli and her book is an important contribution; her assumption of extensive written precursors of the Bavli also has much in its favour.’
Günter Stemberger
Source: Judaica: Neue Digitale Folge
‘It is a distinct pleasure to recommend Monika Amsler’s well written and carefully argued new monograph, The Babylonian Talmud and Late Antique Book Culture, not despite this reviewer’s strong disagreement with many of the claims made in the book, but because of them. Without strong and well-argued challenges to basic prevailing assumptions, the field of Talmud and rabbinics, like any other field of inquiry within the academy, will never advance.‘
Noah Benjamin Bickart
Source: Bryn Mawr Classical Review