Difference between revisions of "Category:Joseph (subject)"
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
According to Jewish (Christian, and Islamic) traditions, '''Joseph''' was one of the [[Twelve Patriarchs]], the son of [[Jacob]] and [[Rachel]]. He was the head of the [[House of Joseph]], the husband of [[Asenath]], the father of [[Manasseh]] and [[Ephraim]] and therefore the forefather of the [[Tribe of Manasseh]] and the [[Tribe of Ephraim]]. | According to Jewish (Christian, and Islamic) traditions, '''Joseph''' was one of the [[Twelve Patriarchs]], the son of [[Jacob]] and [[Rachel]]. He was the head of the [[House of Joseph]], the husband of [[Asenath]], the father of [[Manasseh]] and [[Ephraim]] and therefore the forefather of the [[Tribe of Manasseh]] and the [[Tribe of Ephraim]]. | ||
< [[Childhood of Joseph]] > | |||
< [[Twelve Patriarchs]] -- [[Jacob]] -- [[Rachel]] -- [[Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs]] -- [[Twelve Tribes]] -- [[House of Joseph]] -- [[Tribe of Manasseh]] -- [[Tribe of Ephraim]]> | < [[Twelve Patriarchs]] -- [[Jacob]] -- [[Rachel]] -- [[Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs]] -- [[Twelve Tribes]] -- [[House of Joseph]] -- [[Tribe of Manasseh]] -- [[Tribe of Ephraim]]> |
Revision as of 10:32, 13 January 2020
According to Jewish (Christian, and Islamic) traditions, Joseph was one of the Twelve Patriarchs, the son of Jacob and Rachel. He was the head of the House of Joseph, the husband of Asenath, the father of Manasseh and Ephraim and therefore the forefather of the Tribe of Manasseh and the Tribe of Ephraim.
< Twelve Patriarchs -- Jacob -- Rachel -- Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs -- Twelve Tribes -- House of Joseph -- Tribe of Manasseh -- Tribe of Ephraim>
Overview
Joseph is a literary character of the early Jewish tradition. He was the protagonist of one of the longest narrative in the Pentateuch, concerning his life, the conflict with his brothers, his arrival in Egypt as a slave, his rise to fame and glory, and his final reconciliation with his family.
Joseph in Second Temple Jewish Interpretation
Second Temple Jewish authors rewrote the narrative, especially in Egypt, by making him one of the ancient Jewish heroes.
Artapanus (3rd century BCE) completely ignored all the dark sides of the ancient narrative, by exalting Joseph as a wise Jew who succeeded in becoming one of the most powerful man in Egypt.
The Book of Jubilees (2nd century BCE) also looked favorably at Joseph but precisely because of the conflict with his brothers and especially his chastity in his rejection of Potiphar's wife.
The Wisdom of Solomon and the novel Joseph and Aseneth followed the path of exaltation of Joseph in the Greco-Roman context of the Jewish diaspora, while highlighting his opposition to local Egyptian culture. In Joseph and Aseneth the echoes of the old family quarrel reemerge, some brothers being at odds with Joseph's marriage in spite of the conversion of Aseneth.
More ambivalent is the attitude of Philo, who in De Iosepho exalted the patriarch as the ideal politician, while being much more critical in De Somniis to the point of accusing him of adopting Egyptian customs.
By contrast, Josephus offered a very positive portrait of Joseph, stressing his innocence, righteousness and prophetic skills against the continuous envy by his brothers.
Joseph in later traditions
Later Rabbinic and Christian traditions would place more emphasis on the psychology of the character, often finding elements of ambivalence and guilt in his behavior.
Joseph in ancient sources
- See Joseph (sources) -- survey of ancient sources
Joseph in literature & the arts
- Joseph (arts) -- survey of fictional works
Joseph in scholarship
- Joseph (research) -- survey of scholarly works
References
- Joseph / Maren Niehoff / In: The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), dictionary, 822-823
- / [[]] / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary,
External links
Pages in category "Joseph (subject)"
The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total.
1
- Il ritratto del vero et perfetto gentilhuomo (1575 Zini), book
- Joseph (1745 Fesch), oratorio
- Joseph and his Brethren (1744 Haendel / Miller), oratorio
- Joseph in the Land of Egypt (1914 Moore), feature film
- Yoysef in Mitsraim / Joseph in the Land of Egypt (1932 Roland), feature film
- Joseph und seine Brüder (1933–43 Mann), novel
- Giuseppe venduto dai fratelli (The Story of Joseph and His Brethren / 1960 Rapper), film
- Philon d’Alexandrie, De Iosepho (1964 Laporte), book
- The Story of Jacob and Joseph (1974 Kakogiannis), film
- Greatest Heroes of the Bible: Joseph in Egypt (1978 Conway), TV episode
- Joseph (1979 Heatherley), novel
- I Am Joseph (1980 Cohen / Mikolaycak), children's novel & art
- Joseph as an Ethical Model in the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs (1981 Hollander), book
- The Greatest Adventure: Joseph and His Brothers (1985 Lusk, Patterson), animated TV short film
- Sold into Egypt (1989 L'Engle), novel
- The Figure of Joseph in Post-Biblical Jewish Literature (1992 Niehoff), book
- Joseph (1992 Shott), novel
- The Jewish Novel in the Ancient World (1995 Wills), book
- Brothers (1997 Hunt), novel
- Joseph (1997 Wildsmith), children's novel
- Biblical Figures Outside the Bible (1998 Stone/Bergren), edited volume
2
- It Is I, Joseph (2001 Davis), novel
- A Time to Love: Stories from the Old Testament (2003 Myers / Meyers), children's novel & art
- The Coat of Many Colors (2004 Koralek / Baynes), children's novel & art
- The Animated Kid's Bible (2005 Kantor), animation
- Till Shiloh Comes (2005 Morris), novel
- Giuseppe negli scritti di Qumran (2007 Rossetti), book
Media in category "Joseph (subject)"
The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total.
- 1979 Kraus Reggiani.jpg 363 × 499; 27 KB
- 1995 Young (miniseries).jpg 233 × 425; 26 KB