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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

Featured
The Poetics of Prophecy Review Forum
Ancient Jew Review
Nov 12, 2025
The Poetics of Prophecy Review Forum
Ancient Jew Review
Nov 12, 2025

Yael Fisch, Karama Ben-Johanan, and Raphael Magarik engaging Raz’s notion of “weak prophecy” in this review forum, with author response.

Ancient Jew Review
Nov 12, 2025

Featured
Listening to the Static: An Author Response
Nov 11, 2025
Yosefa Raz
Listening to the Static: An Author Response
Nov 11, 2025
Yosefa Raz

The white spaces on the page can be spaces both of death and breath. Both are texts of drowning, the Egyptian enemies, their horses and chariots, and the African slaves, who were thrown overboard the slave ship in an insurance scam. Somehow, I believe, through this unconscious visual echo, these enemies and victims meet in God’s lament to the angels, (though perhaps this lament is addressed to all of us who sing victory songs): “my creations are drowning in the sea, and you are singing song?”

Nov 11, 2025
Yosefa Raz
Weak Prophecy As A Critique of Just-So Secularization Stories
Nov 9, 2025
Raphael Magarik
Weak Prophecy As A Critique of Just-So Secularization Stories
Nov 9, 2025
Raphael Magarik

In the book’s conclusion, Raz offers weak prophecy as an alternative, reparative model, offering us doubt and circumspection instead of confident certainty, whether theological or nationalist. I would also suggest a second, complementary payoff. To me, the positing of an ancient source that is dogmatic, masculine, and assertively authoritative is one of modernity’s favorite alibis for its own violence.

Nov 9, 2025
Raphael Magarik
Modern Mirrors
Nov 4, 2025
Karma Ben-Johanan
Modern Mirrors
Nov 4, 2025
Karma Ben-Johanan

We gather from here that more than she wants to say something about prophecy, Raz wants to convey something about the history of its reception, about the way modern poets, and perhaps moderns, in general, think about prophets and prophecy and incorporate that thought into their poetry, utilizing poetic language or the characters of prophets.

Nov 4, 2025
Karma Ben-Johanan
"Language of the Limp and the Wound"
Nov 2, 2025
Yael Fisch
"Language of the Limp and the Wound"
Nov 2, 2025
Yael Fisch

With Yosefa’s book, we now have nuanced poetic language with which we may read this homily. The Rabbis were not prophets, nor singers or poets. They were strong readers. They saw reading as an opportunity to stretch out biblical scenes into their present.

Nov 2, 2025
Yael Fisch
The_Commentary_on_Habakkuk_Scroll_(1QpHab)_Written_in_Hebrew_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
Oct 29, 2025
Alex P. Jassen
Publication Preview | Exploring the Violent Imaginary of the Dead Sea Scrolls
Oct 29, 2025
Alex P. Jassen

Alex P. Jassen previews his new book exploring the diverse ways social contestation and violence was perceived and imagined by the Dead Sea Scrolls Sectarians.

Oct 29, 2025
Alex P. Jassen
Apocalyptic Masculinity
Oct 23, 2025
Megan Wines
Apocalyptic Masculinity
Oct 23, 2025
Megan Wines

To expand thinking around performance and apocalypse, my project incorporates a consideration of gender to these categories. So, in this project, I am concerned with answering the question “is there such a thing as apocalyptic masculinity?”

Oct 23, 2025
Megan Wines
Qasr_Al-Abd,_Hellenistic_palace_dating_from_approximately_200_BC,_Jordan_(24418876337).jpeg
Oct 20, 2025
Robert E. Jones
The Hellenistic Context of the Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls
Oct 20, 2025
Robert E. Jones

The Aramaic Dead Sea Scrolls display an overwhelming interest in the Israelite priesthood, sacrificial cult, and Jerusalem temple. A look at the Aramaic Levi Document reveals that this interest may have to do with the shifting fortunes of the priesthood in the third century BCE.

Oct 20, 2025
Robert E. Jones
Hidden No More: Women in the Parables of Luke
Sep 25, 2025
Charel Daniël du Toit
Hidden No More: Women in the Parables of Luke
Sep 25, 2025
Charel Daniël du Toit

In this study a sustained, interdisciplinary argument is offered for the presence of women in parables where they are not named or explicitly described.

Sep 25, 2025
Charel Daniël du Toit
Featured
A Memory of Violence
Briana Grenert
Oct 14, 2025
A Memory of Violence
Briana Grenert
Oct 14, 2025

A Memory of Violence offers a useful overview for anyone interested in understanding Chalcedon and its effects at a more detailed level, as well as those interested in the history of Christianity writ large.

Briana Grenert
Oct 14, 2025
Human Salvation in Early Christianity: Exploring the Theology of Physicalist Soteriology
Brad Boswell
Aug 10, 2025
Human Salvation in Early Christianity: Exploring the Theology of Physicalist Soteriology
Brad Boswell
Aug 10, 2025

Scully’s book commendably demonstrates the need for renewed and careful attention to a pattern of thought that has been treated poorly, and it does so with sharp analytical clarity.

Brad Boswell
Aug 10, 2025
Review | In the Beginning Was the State: Divine Violence in the Hebrew Bible
Emily Filler
Mar 13, 2025
Review | In the Beginning Was the State: Divine Violence in the Hebrew Bible
Emily Filler
Mar 13, 2025

“Ophir insists that he is not simply claiming the modern sovereign as a “secularized political concept,” but something deeper: a deification of the state itself, as the one concept that we cannot think without, just as the biblical writers could not imagine not being ruled by God.”

Emily Filler
Mar 13, 2025
Screen Shot 2024-12-04 at 9.24.50 AM.png
Ethan Schwartz
Dec 4, 2024
God’s Monsters: Vengeful Spirits, Deadly Angels, Hybrid Creatures, and Divine Hitmen of the Bible
Ethan Schwartz
Dec 4, 2024
Ethan Schwartz
Dec 4, 2024
Seder Mazikin: Law and Magic in Late Antique Jewish Society
Sarit Kattan Gribetz
Oct 31, 2024
Seder Mazikin: Law and Magic in Late Antique Jewish Society
Sarit Kattan Gribetz
Oct 31, 2024

As scholars continue to investigate the bowls from multiple angles – paleographic, onomastic, linguistic, social historical, legal, literary, ritual, visual, gendered, comparative – our understanding of Babylonian Judaism and late antique society will continue to develop. Manekin-Bamberger’s insights about the bowls’ contractual dimensions and the professional scribes who produced them – as well as about the overlap of law and magic on a broader scale – are an essential contribution to this field, and will no doubt shape, methodologically and historically, how future studies approach this corpus and its relationship to other ancient Jewish texts and artifacts and to the long history of magic, law, and religion.

Sarit Kattan Gribetz
Oct 31, 2024

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