Warring against Terror: The War Scroll and the Mobilization of Emotion

Research notes: 
reader checked 22/02/2012 AL
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Weitzman, Steven
year: 
2009
Full title: 

Warring against Terror: The War Scroll and the Mobilization of Emotion

Translated title: 
Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Journal for the Study of Judaism
Volume: 
40
Issue / Series Volume: 
2
Number of volumes: 
0
Series Title: 
Abbreviated Series Name: 
Collaborating Author: 
Place of Publication: 
Publisher: 
Pages: 
213-241
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Work type: 
Abstract: 

While noticing that the tactics and weapons prescribed in the War Scroll resemble those used by Greek and Roman armies, previous scholarship has been dubious of the idea that the scroll actually guided real-life military practice because its battle-plan seems so impractical, assuming a conflict that unfolds in a highly scripted way and relying on ritual and supernatural assistance. This essay aims to rethink the role that the War Scroll played in early Jewish military practice by reading it in light of Greco-Roman theories of how to deploy emotion in battle. Military thinkers like Xenophon and Julius Caesar recognized troop psychology as an important tactical variable that could be manipulated through ritual and supernatural portents. The War Scroll mirrors these practices in a way that supports reading it as a similar effort to manipulate troop psychology arising under the influence of—and perhaps in reaction against—Greco-Roman military practice.

Notes: 
Language: 
Alternative title: 
JSJ
Date: 
Edition: 
Original Publication: 
Reprint edition: 
URL: 
http://haifaisr.library.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/jsj/2009/00000040/00000002/art00003
DOI: 
ISBN: 
Accession number: 
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Label: 
20/04/2009
Record number: 
12 102