|
|
|
|
The Book of Customs
A Complete Handbook for the Jewish Year
Scott-Martin Kosofsky
|
About the book:
Fifteen years ago while researching Jewish imagery, award-winning book
designer Scott-Martin Kosofsky happened upon a 1645 edition of the
Minhogimbukh -- the "Customs Book" -- a beautifully designed and
illustrated guide to the Jewish year written in Yiddish, the people's
vernacular. Captivated, he investigated further and learned that from
1590 to 1890, this cross between a prayer book and a farmer's almanac
was immensely popular in households all across Europe. Published in
dozens of editions and revised over the centuries in Venice, Prague,
Amsterdam, and throughout Germany before moving eastward in the
nineteenth century to Poland and Russia, these books detail the
evolution of Jewish custom over three hundred years. But by the 1890s,
as Jewish practice became polarized between the secularist and
traditionalist views, the Minhogimbukh disappeared.
There are no works quite like the historical customs books available
today and none so thorough and concise, intuitive in organization, and
beautiful. Inspired by the originals, Kosofsky set out to make his
own, adapting the books for modern use, adding historical perspective
and contemporary application. The result is the reappearance of the
Minhogimbukh after more than a hundred-year absence, and the first
complete showing of all the original woodcuts -- a visual vocabulary
of Jewish life -- since the 1760s. Faithfully based on the earlier
editions, The Book of Customs is an updated guide to the rituals,
liturgies, and texts of the entire Jewish year -- from the days of the
week and the Sabbath to all the months with their festivals, as well
as the major life-cycle events of wedding, birth, bar and bat mitzvah,
and death. With the revival of this lost cultural legacy, The Book of
Customs can once again become every family's guide to Jewish tradition
and practice.
|
|
|
|