Description
Description
How people have reimagined the story of the ten plagues of Egypt, from antiquity to our own era of relentless catastrophe
People have been telling and retelling stories about disasters for as long as they have been telling stories. One of the oldest of such stories is the ten plagues in the book of Exodus, the series of disasters that forced the Egyptians to liberate the Israelites. These plagues packed enough catastrophe to fill a series of summer blockbusters--rivers of blood, invasions of frogs and insects, mass disease, fiery hail, smothering darkness, and a midnight massacre of the firstborn. The story of the ten plagues resonates today, as we try to make sense of such calamities of modern life as pandemics, climate change, and war. In Disasters of Biblical Proportions, Steven Weitzman explores how people of later ages--artists, writers, activists, philosophers, believers and unbelievers alike--have reshaped the story of the ten plagues to give expression to their own trauma, outrage, guilt, humor, and hope. Tracing the interpretation and retelling of each plague across time and space, Weitzman uncovers how this ancient tale found new meaning among Jews, Christians, and Muslims and continues to shape how people today understand the present and envision the future. Even as it recounts the history of how the ten plagues have been reimagined, Disasters of Biblical Proportions is also a history of people's search for shelter from the calamities of their own times--and of humanity's striving for justice, freedom, and redemption.
About the Author
About the Author
Steven Weitzman is the Abraham M. Ellis Professor of Hebrew and Semitic Languages and Literatures at the University of Pennsylvania, where he also serves as the Ella Darivoff Director of the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies. He is the author of Solomon: The Lure of Wisdom and The Origin of the Jews: The Quest for Roots in a Rootless Age (Princeton), the winner of a National Jewish Book Award. He is also a coeditor of The Princeton Companion to Jewish Studies (Princeton).
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"Weitzman shows how God's punishments of Pharaoh's Egypt have been understood, envisioned, artistically rendered, reimagined, and politically repurposed from antiquity to modern Hollywood. . . . A great deal of the fun of Weitzman's book is in such colorful historical digressions."---Stuart Halpern, Jewish Review of Books
"Weitzman skillfully unearths hidden connections between theology and culture, showing how biblical texts have served as sites for thinkers and communities to negotiate identity, persecution, and meaning. It's a comprehensive overview of a foundational biblical narrative and its complex legacies."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"
The book fun to read, and indeed it is laced with humor. . . . I hope that Disasters of Biblical Proportions detailed and thoughtful case studies will provide a model for scholars of contemporary Judaism for how to study the modern biblical motifs and stories in a sound historical fashion.
"---Marc Zvi Brettler, Contemporary Jewry
Publishing Information
Publishing Information
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Pub date:
2026-02-03
Length:
352 pages

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