Together the essays of this volume explore the themes of Scriptures and Sectarianism from a variety of lenses, ranging from close study of specific texts to broad assessments of scriptural authority and meaning-making in the Second Temple Period.
Read MoreWeek in Review (12/8/17)
Detail of the sixth-century Hippolytus Mosaic | Madaba, Jordan | Image Source
Detail of the sixth-century Hippolytus Mosaic | Madaba, Jordan | Image Source
This Week: Syrian cultural heritage, Arab conquest, subversive biblical sexuality, Ecclesiastes, lived #lateantiquity – and more!
Read MoreDissertation Spotlight | Yael Landman
Louvre Reproduction of the Law Code of Hammurabi via CC BY-SA 2.0 Mary Harrsch
Louvre Reproduction of the Law Code of Hammurabi via CC BY-SA 2.0 Mary Harrsch
When viewed in conjunction with the wealth of pertinent biblical and ANE sources, the biblical law of bailment can tell us about a law in its many contexts, about divine justice and compassion, about the interactions of law with literature, about everyday life in ancient societies, and about the earliest articulations of a legal topic whose relevance has persisted into the modern era.
Read MoreBook Note | Ecclesiastes and the Riddle of Authorship
In short, Bolin argues that the well-known interpretive problems posed by the book of Ecclesiastes, and in particular the shadowy figure of Qohelet, are generative.
Read MoreWeek in Review (12/1/17)
The Oval Forum, Gerasa | Image source
The Oval Forum, Gerasa | Image source
This Week: Apocrypha upon apocrypha, German royalty, Jewish catacombs, pigeons in antiquity, biblical epic – and more!
Read MoreDissertation Spotlight | Jessica Dello Russo
Ironically enough, at the time these stories, literally, made history, the catacombs for Jews remained "secret" and known to a minimal extent. Nevertheless, they, too, were seen as collective responses to ritual needs and distinctly Biblical traditions.
Read MoreBook Note | Valuing the past in the Greco-Roman World
Valuing the Past in the Greco-Roman World asks how the past was defined, accessed, and valued in that period of time so often considered “our” antiquity (18) and provides an array of fascinating examples that work together to undercut notions of the value of the past in the past as in any way uniform or monolithic.
Read MoreAdrian's Introduction: An "Antiochene" Handbook on Biblical Exegesis
Adrian’s Introduction to the Divine Scriptures, likely dated to the fifth century, is our earliest surviving “Antiochene” handbook on biblical exegesis.
Read MoreBook Note | Urban Dreams and Realities in Antiquity: Remains and Representations of the Ancient City
Indeed, central to the volume are two implicit acknowledgements: 1) that the ancient urban “realities” are inaccessible to the modern scholar except by means of imaginative approaches, and 2) that urban “dreams” no less “real” than their material counterparts.
Read MorePSCO 2017-18: Jews and the Land from Muslim to Christian Spain
"Berns’ talk, and the seminar discussion, enabled reflection from an unexpected angle on the PSCO theme for the year: what does it mean for us to have expertise about what ancient Jews knew (and how they knew it)?
Read MorePhiladelphia Seminar on Christian Origins (PSCO) 2017-2018
AJR will be sharing highlights from the Philadelphia Seminar on Christian Origins. This year's theme "science and the scientific" asks, "Does considering knowledge as practiced in the ancient world disrupt, modify, and nuance our understanding of the “scientific”?"
Read MoreMedicine, Health Care Studies, and the Field of Late Antiquity
How did ancient scientists think about the ways plants fit into the larger cosmological order in relation to other ontological forms such as metals/minerals, animals, celestial beings, and other divinities?
Read MoreBook Note | Divine Deliverance: Pain and Painlessness in Early Christian Martyr Texts
Divine Deliverance contributes to the rich variety of scholarship that examines ancient texts not for historical detail but for rhetorical effect.
Read MoreWeek in Review (10/27/17)
Illustration of Galen and other ancient medics | Vienna Dioskorides (ca.512), f. 3v | Image source
Illustration of Galen and other ancient medics | Vienna Dioskorides (ca.512), f. 3v | Image source
This Week: Disability Studies, rabbis and Romans, carbon dating, theaters, Bladerunner, buddhas - and more!
Read MoreAncient Medicine: An AJR Forum
Caroline Wazer, Lennart Lehmhaus, Chris De Wet, Julia Watts Belser, and Heid Marx examine aspects of ancient medicine from their own research.
Read MoreDisability Studies and Rabbinic Resistance to the Roman Conquest of Jerusalem
Dr. Julia Watts Belser uses disability theory to read rabbinic narratives about the destruction of Jerusalem, identifying how "the disabled Jewish body serves both as a visceral occasion for lament and a potent site of protest against empire."
Read MoreBook Note | On Prophets, Warriors, and Kings Former Prophets through the Eyes of Their Interpreters
Joshua Matson with a summary of the edited volume On Prophets, Warriors, and Kings, which contains conference papers from "various scholars who explored how the Former Prophets have been read, interpreted, and utilized throughout the ages."
Read MoreMedicine, Culture, and Self in Late Antiquity: A Gastronomic Reflection
"What is intriguing about such statements as cited above—and one can list many similar cases with other authors—is that in them we witness how health, physiology, and anatomy are structured by means of social and cultural discursive formations. In this case, the discourse of slavery, which I have termed doulology,[iv] structures the dynamics between mental and gastric health. By their extension into the realm of the material psychē, these dynamics, in turn, shape the self. You are how you eat."
Read MoreBook Note | The Christian Schism in Jewish History and Jewish Memory
Joshua Blachorsky with a book note of Burns' The Christian Schism in Jewish History and Jewish Memory: "Burns continues the trend of eschewing the traditional parting model and envisioning a split only after the beginning of the 4th century. But he does so with a novel lens, focusing on the rabbinic evidence."
Read MoreWeek in Review (10/12/17)
Busts of Sol Invictus and Constantine I | Gold solidus minted in Ticinum in 313CE to commemorate victory at the Milvian Bridge | Image source
Busts of Sol Invictus and Constantine I | Gold solidus minted in Ticinum in 313CE to commemorate victory at the Milvian Bridge | Image source
This Week: Constantine, Jewish warrior poets, Talmudic medicine, magic incantation amulets – and more!
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