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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

January 17, 2018

Erasing the Hyphen from the Study of Early Judaism

by Francis Borchardt in Articles


Zodiac mosaic at the Beit Alpha synagogue. 

Zodiac mosaic at the Beit Alpha synagogue. 

Zodiac mosaic at the Beit Alpha synagogue. 

Zodiac mosaic at the Beit Alpha synagogue. 

Francis Borchardt (“Erasing the Hyphen from the Study of Early Judaism”) builds on Ben’s work on Hellenistic Jewish ethnicity to discuss how to think about Jewish self-definition in the Hellenistic period, in light of the great diversity of the sources, practices, and communities we call Jewish.

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January 17, 2018

Emulation in Ben Sira and its Hellenistic Context

by Elisa Uusimäki in Articles


Print introducing Sirach from 17th century Claes Janszoon Visscher Dutch Polyglot Bible

Print introducing Sirach from 17th century Claes Janszoon Visscher Dutch Polyglot Bible

Print introducing Sirach from 17th century Claes Janszoon Visscher Dutch Polyglot Bible

Print introducing Sirach from 17th century Claes Janszoon Visscher Dutch Polyglot Bible

Elisa Uusimäki’s essay (“Emulation in Ben Sira and its Hellenistic Context”) shows how the idea of the sage might be better understood by reading Jewish texts like Ben Sira together with non-Jewish Greek philosophical writing on how to learn virtue.

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January 17, 2018

The Translation of the Torah in Alexandria and the Relevance of the Rosetta Stone

by Stewart Moore in Articles


The Rosetta Stone in the British Museum. Attribution: © Hans Hillewaert

The Rosetta Stone in the British Museum. Attribution: © Hans Hillewaert

The Rosetta Stone in the British Museum. Attribution: © Hans Hillewaert

The Rosetta Stone in the British Museum. Attribution: © Hans Hillewaert

Stewart Moore (“The Translation of the Torah in Alexandria and the Relevance of the Rosetta Stone”) engages Ben’s scholarship on the purpose of the Septuagint translation, highlighting its possible implications for the ethnic identity of Judeans in Egypt.

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January 16, 2018

The Role of Wisdom for the Scribe and Scholar

by James Tucker in Articles


"The Librarian" by Guiseppe Arcimboldos. Public Domain. 

"The Librarian" by Guiseppe Arcimboldos. Public Domain. 

"The Librarian" by Guiseppe Arcimboldos. Public Domain. 

"The Librarian" by Guiseppe Arcimboldos. Public Domain. 

James Tucker (“The Role of Wisdom for the Scribe and Scholar”) considers how our understanding of the Qumran Community Rule and the Damascus Document might be informed by critiques of traditional philological concepts of “original text” and “work,” considerations familiar from Ben’s work on the complicated textual history of Ben Sira.

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January 16, 2018

Ben Sira as a Baby: The Alphabet of Ben Sira and Authorial Personae

by Jillian Stinchcomb in Articles


Betty Blythe as the Queen of Sheba, 1921

Betty Blythe as the Queen of Sheba, 1921

Betty Blythe as the Queen of Sheba, 1921

Betty Blythe as the Queen of Sheba, 1921

Jillian Stinchcomb (“Ben Sira as a Baby: The Alphabet of Ben Sira and Authorial Personae”) shows how the persona of the sage and “author” we see in the early Jewish book of Ben Sira takes surprising--and sometimes shocking--turns in Ben Sira’s medieval afterlife.

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January 16, 2018

Voice and Presence in the Genesis Apocryphon

by Jacqueline Vayntrub in Articles


"Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace" by James Tissot. The Jewish Museum of NYC. 

"Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace" by James Tissot. The Jewish Museum of NYC. 

"Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace" by James Tissot. The Jewish Museum of NYC. 

"Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace" by James Tissot. The Jewish Museum of NYC. 

Dr. Jacqueline Vayntrub (“Voice and Presence in the Genesis Apocryphon”) considers how the voice and agency of Sarai in the Genesis Apocryphon, an Aramaic text from Qumran, complicates our ideas about the authoritative first person voice in Second Temple Jewish texts.

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January 16, 2018

Introduction to A Genius for Mentorship: A Forum in Honor of Ben Wright on his 65th Birthday

by Francis Borchardt and Eva Mroczek in Articles


BenParkBench.jpg
BenParkBench.jpg

Francis Borchardt and Eva Mroczek introduce the "alternative Festschrift" in Dr. Ben Wright's honor. 

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January 16, 2018

A Genius for Mentorship: A Forum in Honor of Ben Wright on his 65th Birthday

by Francis Borchardt and Eva Mroczek in Articles


Nine contributors consider many facets of Ben’s scholarship on translation, authorial personae and voice, concepts of text and transmission, wisdom and the sage, and Jewish identity in the Hellenistic world.

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TAGS: forum


January 11, 2018

Week in Review (01/12/18)

by Ancient Jew Review


Mosaic of Mary and Angelic Court | Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source

Mosaic of Mary and Angelic Court | Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source

Mosaic of Mary and Angelic Court | Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source

Mosaic of Mary and Angelic Court | Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna | Image Source

A New Year & Ancient Jew Review returns! This Week: Papyrus mystery, graphic novels, infinity, Elijah, Romanos, podcasts – and more!

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January 9, 2018

Dissertation Spotlight | Michael Motia

by Michael Motia in Articles


Silver Mirror (4th c. CE)  - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Silver Mirror (4th c. CE)  - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Silver Mirror (4th c. CE)  - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Silver Mirror (4th c. CE)  - The Metropolitan Museum of Art

If Gregory describes the aim or perfection of the Christian life as “never to stop growing towards what is better and never placing any limit on perfection,” how does mīmēis (Greek: imitation, representation) function within that endless pursuit?

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TAGS: dissertation


January 8, 2018

Book Note | The Virgin in Song

by Erin Galgay Walsh in Book Notes


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Unknown-2.jpeg

In The Virgin in Song, Thomas Arentzen demonstrates the centrality of Mary within the “civic imaginary” of sixth-century Constantinople through an examination of Romanos’s characterization of the Virgin Mother in his kontakia.

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January 3, 2018

Dissertation Spotlight | Hilla Alouf

by Hilla Alouf in Articles


17th cent icon of Elijah and Enoch in Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland. Przykuta [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

17th cent icon of Elijah and Enoch in Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland. Przykuta [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

17th cent icon of Elijah and Enoch in Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland. Przykuta [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

17th cent icon of Elijah and Enoch in Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland. Przykuta [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

Hilla Alouf's dissertation argues that "the Elijah traditions reflect the influence of not only the Torah-Centered wisdom tradition which viewed the law as the source of wisdom, but also the Apocalyptic-Centered and the Spirit-Centered wisdom traditions."

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TAGS: dissertation


December 21, 2017

Week in Review (12/22/17)

by Ancient Jew Review


Medieval Byzantine mosaic of Mary, with child and genealogy | Church of the Holy Savior in Chora, Istanbul | Image Source

Medieval Byzantine mosaic of Mary, with child and genealogy | Church of the Holy Savior in Chora, Istanbul | Image Source

Medieval Byzantine mosaic of Mary, with child and genealogy | Church of the Holy Savior in Chora, Istanbul | Image Source

Medieval Byzantine mosaic of Mary, with child and genealogy | Church of the Holy Savior in Chora, Istanbul | Image Source

This Week: Forgery, golems, posthumanism, medieval Africa, Jewish supernatural, #BigData antiquity – and much more!

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December 19, 2017

Dissertation Spotlight | Phillip Fackler

by Phillip Fackler in Articles


Saint Ignatius of Antioch - 10th century ceramic (Turkey) courtesy of The Walters Museum

Saint Ignatius of Antioch - 10th century ceramic (Turkey) courtesy of The Walters Museum

Saint Ignatius of Antioch - 10th century ceramic (Turkey) courtesy of The Walters Museum

Saint Ignatius of Antioch - 10th century ceramic (Turkey) courtesy of The Walters Museum

Sometime near the end of the fourth century, an anonymous scribe carefully read and revised the Ignatian epistles, extensively amending many of the letters and adding a few of his own in Ignatius’s name.

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TAGS: dissertation


December 17, 2017

Book Note | Jews, Gentiles, and Other Animals: The Talmud After the Humanities

by M Adryael Tong in Book Notes


51892912.jpeg
51892912.jpeg

M Tong with a book note on Mira Wasserman's Jews, Gentiles, and Other Animals: "Wasserman’s book does something very important: it sets the table for a new kind of conversation––one where the Talmud can lead to a greater understanding of theory, not just the other way around.

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December 14, 2017

Week in Review (12/15/17)

by Ancient Jew Review


Christ preaches to the Cynocephali | From the Kievan Psalter (1397) | Image source

Christ preaches to the Cynocephali | From the Kievan Psalter (1397) | Image source

Christ preaches to the Cynocephali | From the Kievan Psalter (1397) | Image source

Christ preaches to the Cynocephali | From the Kievan Psalter (1397) | Image source

This Week: Ancient Animal Knowledge, Dead Sea Scrolls, piyyut and #Hanukkah2017, illustrated papyri – and more!

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December 12, 2017

PSCO 2017-18: Thinking with Ancient Animals

by Matthew Chalmers in Articles


Centaur - Bestiary, Royal MS 12 C XIX; 1200-1210 | Image source

Centaur - Bestiary, Royal MS 12 C XIX; 1200-1210 | Image source

Centaur - Bestiary, Royal MS 12 C XIX; 1200-1210 | Image source

Centaur - Bestiary, Royal MS 12 C XIX; 1200-1210 | Image source

How do claims, explicit or implicit, about what animals are—and what they do, suffer, or feel—reflect assumptions about what people are? And what types of knowing engage animals?

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December 10, 2017

Scriptures and Sectarianism: Essays on the Dead Sea Scrolls

by Amanda M. Davis Bledsoe in Articles


51821210.jpeg
51821210.jpeg

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. 

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TAGS: dssreview


December 8, 2017

Week in Review (12/8/17)

by Ancient Jew Review


Detail of the sixth-century Hippolytus Mosaic | Madaba, Jordan | Image Source

Detail of the sixth-century Hippolytus Mosaic | Madaba, Jordan | Image Source

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!

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December 6, 2017

Dissertation Spotlight | Yael Landman

by Yael Landman Wermuth in Articles


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

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. 

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TAGS: dissertation


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