Judaism, History, and the Environment

Climate Change and Natural Disasters

Dean Phillip Bell author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Publishing:13th Nov '25

£65.00

This title is due to be published on 13th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Judaism, History, and the Environment cover

Considers how Jewish history, thought, and texts can help us to understand the environment and address climate change and natural disasters, today and in the future.

Engaging creatively with Jewish texts and history, this book explores the interplay between history, Judaism, and the environment through the prism of natural disasters. Historical case studies include earthquakes in Georgian England, floods and fires in 18th-century Germany, plague in 17th-century Italy, and natural disasters experienced by Jews living in the Ottoman Empire.

Rather than seeing religion as a stumbling block or as a cause of environmental degradation, these historical cases are instead brought into conversation with related classical Jewish texts and contemporary Jewish thought. Unlike studies that interpret religious texts through traditional hermeneutical lenses, this book is distinctly interdisciplinary, contributing significantly to the fields of Jewish studies, religious studies, ecology, and environmental humanities.

Chapters explore new ways to think about contemporary environmental concerns, discussing the Anthropocene, causality and temporality, global and local contexts, and proscription. Dean Phillip Bell’s timely and important argument demonstrates how a new engagement with Jewish history and thought may help us to grapple with the environmental challenges of today and the future.

ISBN: 9781350463202

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

264 pages