"Dominion Built of Praise represents an original and comprehensive diachronic study of medieval Hebrew poetry of praise, how and why it was deployed, and what religious and literary intellectuals thought about it. Readers of medieval Hebrew literature and comparatists are indebted to Decter for inviting us to return to the panegyric as an artistically and conceptually complex cultural artifact and for opening important and fascinating new lines of inquiry into its discourse." (Speculum) "Decter has produced a valuable book which deepens our understanding of the phenomenon of praise poetry in the Jewish Mediterranean in every respect, in relation to power and authority within Jewish society and beyond. It is an excellently written book in which formal data and personal opinions are fully justified by original sources and relevant scholarly studies. It is a must for anyone who has questions about the meaning of the art of praise poetry in medieval times." (English Historical Review) "Decter's book is the rigorous product of a fruitful and well-planned study of the genre of panegyrics. He offers a journey through the genre, focusing on key aspects, authors, and works to understand the differences across time and space. His superb knowledge of the medieval Islamic world allows the analysis to be conducted against the background of the Arabo-Islamic intellectual trends that inform and shed light on the development of the Hebrew cultural production. In addition, Decter manages to enrich the discussion by providing well-selected examples. There is no doubt that Dominion Built of Praise successfully fills the conspicuous gap in our knowledge of the panegyric genre within the history of Hebrew literature." (Religion & Literature) "Dominion Built of Praise is clear and surefooted, its historical contextualization deft, and its revisionism refreshing and never heavy-handed. Jonathan Decter has a profound and intimate knowledge of medieval Hebrew poems and other texts, many of them unpublished and all of them in some ways overlooked. Medieval Hebrew praise poetry has never been taken so seriously, and Decter demonstrates why it should be." (Marina Rustow, Princeton University) "Dominion Built of Praise represents a very important diachronic study of the relatively neglected genre of medieval Hebrew praise poetry. Customarily treated or dismissed as highly styled in form and thoroughly conventional in content, Hebrew panegyric in Jonathan Decter's highly skilled hands speaks directly and indirectly, through language and representation, to communal leadership, authority, and legitimacy. Thanks to Decter's wide-ranging perspective, Dominion Built of Praise extends beyond al-Andalus to mapping and analyzing Hebrew literary creativity in Christian Europe, Italy, and other Mediterranean lands." (Ross Brann, Cornell University) "Panegyric is both central to the medieval Jewish literary tradition and aesthetically challenging. Jonathan Decter explores how it operated within a politically dominion-less Jewish community and how it was used to negotiate between the Jewish community or its members and the ruling Muslim or Christian power. Drawing on original textual research in Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic, Judeo-Arabic, and Castilian, he has produced a study that contributes to all of those fields." (Suzanne Stetkevych, Georgetown University)