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Rashi's Commentary on the Torah

Bible Studies scholar to receive second coveted award for his seminal work

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Prof. Eric Lawee, of Bar-Ilan’s Zalman Shamir Bible Department, is the finalist in the prestigious Jordan Schnitzer Book Awards competition of the Association for Jewish Studies for 2021. Prof. Lawee's book Rashi’s Commentary on the Torah: Canonization and Resistance in the Reception of a Jewish Classic (Oxford University Press) is being recognized in the Medieval and Early Modern Jewish History and Culture category. 

Prof. Lawee’s book sheds light on the great 11th-century Jewish Bible commentator, Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki – known by his Hebrew acronym “Rashi” – who has influenced more than any other commentator the way in which Jews understand the Torah for nearly a thousand years. Although Rashi’s exegetical classic has been extensively researched, few studies have dealt with the reception of this most important commentary, let alone with the surprisingly fierce resistance to its canonization that Prof. Lawee uncovered as such resistance arose in other cultural milieux. Prof. Lawee’s book uniquely explores these issues, presenting diverse outlooks on Judaism which emerged from the encounter between various commentators and thinkers with Rashi’s commentary to the Torah. In 2019, Prof. Lawee received a National Jewish Book Award in the Scholarship category for the same volume, which just this year appeared in a paperback edition.

“Rashi’s Commentary may have shaped Judaism and the Jewish people more than any other work, but for the Bible and the Talmud,” says Prof. Lawee. “It has been a fascinating journey across countless dimensions of Jewish thought, literature, history, and education to discover how this work achieved its supremely influential status.”

The incumbent of the Asher Weiser Chair for Research into Medieval Jewish Biblical Interpretation, Prof. Lawee directs Bar-Ilan’s Institute for Jewish Bible Interpretation. He previously was a faculty member at York University in Toronto and Stanford University in California, and was Shoshana Shier Distinguished Visiting Professor of Jewish Studies at the University of Toronto in 2018.  

The Schnitzer Book Award was established by the Association of Jewish Studies in 2007 to recognize and promote outstanding scholarship in the field of Jewish studies and to honor scholars whose work embodies the best in the field: innovative research, excellent writing, and sophisticated methodology. Awards are given in eight categories of Judaic scholarship, four areas per year. In each category there is a first prize and finalist prize.  

The Award will be presented in an awards ceremony in Chicago on December 20 at the annual conference of the Association for Jewish Studies.