Everett Fox

Everett Fox is a scholar and translator of the Hebrew Bible, a graduate of Brandeis University. He is currently the Allen M. Glick Professor of Judaic and Biblical Studies and director of the program in Jewish Studies at Clark University.

Fox is perhaps best known for his translation into English of the Torah. His translation is heavily influenced by the principles of Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig. Buber in 1962 completed their translation of the Hebrew Bible into German. Fox translated their Scripture and Translation into English (Weissbort and Eysteinsson 562). The main guiding principle of the work is that the sound of the Hebrew text should be translated as closely as possible. Instances of word play, puns, word repetition, alliteration, and other literary devices of sound are reproduced in English.

Fox's translation of the Torah was published in 1995 by Schocken Books (a division of Random House) as The Five Books of Moses. Fox continues to translate, and in 1999 published Give Us a King!, a translation of the books of Samuel.

Fox served as a religious consultant on the making of the film Prince of Egypt.[1]

Fox is the husband of Jewish educator Rabbi Cherie Koller-Fox and father of three children, Akiva Fox, Leora Koller-Fox, and Ezra Fox.

Selected publications

References

Weissbort, Daniel and Astradur Eysteinsson. 2006. Translation—Theory and Practice: A Historical Reader, (pp. 562–568 about Fox). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

External links