My book aims in part to connect debates between Nicenes and Homoians in Vandal Africa—and across the post-imperial West—to those wider developments in the historiography of late ancient Christianity from which they have been peculiarly absent.
Read MoreBook Note | Incorruptible Bodies: Christology, Society, and Authority in Late Antiquity
The subject of Moss’s monograph, a revision of his Yale dissertation, is Severus’s theological, political, liturgical, and cultural contestations with fellow anti-Chalcedonians inclined to give up on the imperial church.
Read MoreWeek in Review (2/23/18)
Illuminated leaf from the Book of Hosea | From a Bible made for the Teutonic Knights at Nieuwe Biesen, ca. 1300 | Image Source
Illuminated leaf from the Book of Hosea | From a Bible made for the Teutonic Knights at Nieuwe Biesen, ca. 1300 | Image Source
This Week: Huge papyri databases, debate over “seal of Isaiah,” #digitalhumanities galore, unstable masculinity, rabbinic ethnography – and more!
Read MoreCuriouser and Curiouser: In Search of the Rabbis' Ethnography
Are there patterns among these descriptive detours, the rabbit-holes of the rabbinic imagination? Do they point to consistent interests? Retrace stock motifs and techniques? How can we map their interconnections, and how are they linked to normative projects–broadly defined–at the nerve-center of this rabbinic canon?
Read MoreBook Note | Are We Not Men? Unstable Masculinity in the Hebrew Prophets
Her innovation is bringing the male prophetic body, not just prophetic words, under consideration.
Read MoreWeek in Review (2/16/18)
Virgin Mary and child | Apse mosaic, Santa Maria Assunta, Venice | Image Source
Virgin Mary and child | Apse mosaic, Santa Maria Assunta, Venice | Image Source
This Week: On anti-Jewishness, #digitalhumanities, palaeography online, photo archives, lullabies, Second Temple Torah – and more!
Read MoreAugustine and “Thinking with” Jews: Rhetoric Pro- and Contra Iudaeos
To call a gentile Christian a “Jew” was likewise to accuse him of being un-Christian, indeed of being anti-Christian. The heretical Christian “Jew” – whatever current Christian doctrinal enemy that might be – was thereby identified with the scriptural enemies of Paul, of Jesus, and of God.
Read MoreBook Note | The Invention of Judaism
Originally delivered as a series of lectures at Berkley in 2013, Collins seeks to synthesize recent scholarly debates about the nature of ancient Jewish (or Judean) identity. In particular, Collins examines the role the Torah, or Law of Moses, played in the formation of a distinct religious and cultural way of life.
Read MoreWeek in Review (2/9/18)
Detail of mother feeding child | Sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, c.150CE, currently in the collection of the Louvre | Image Source
Detail of mother feeding child | Sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, c.150CE, currently in the collection of the Louvre | Image Source
This Week: Fragments, #pedagogy, ancient medicine, visualizing Jesus, talking race – and more!
Read MoreVoices, Fragments and Selves: Preserving Ancient and Contemporary Multi-vocality in Our Classrooms
Whose voices from the past have been preserved, whose voices have been lost, and what is at stake, ethically and methodologically, for whose voices, past and present, we choose to hear today?
Read MorePSCO 2017-18: Nurses, Midwives, Healers, and Talmudic Medical Encyclopaedism
Lehmhaus’s talk pointed to exciting possibilities for future scholarship which grapple with how to fully understand the multipolar functions, within rabbinic literature and beyond it, of discrete bits of scientific or medical data embedded in rabbinic texts.
Read MoreWeek in Review (2/2/18)
Mosaic inscription from Rehov Synagogue | Beth Shean Valley, C6-C7CE | Image Source
Mosaic inscription from Rehov Synagogue | Beth Shean Valley, C6-C7CE | Image Source
This Week: #digitalhumanities, Museum of the Bible, magic and apotropaic amulets, classification and classics, podcasts – and more!
Read MoreIncompatible Sites: The Land of Israel and the Ambulant Body in the Museum of the Bible
Perhaps we should trip in the same way on that word “museum.” We should attend to the stories museums and colonies tell about themselves; we should be cognizant of their designs on the body.
Read MoreThe Creationist MOTB: Judaism and Judaica at the Answers in Genesis Creationist Facilities
The issue that concerns this paper is not how the MOTB lends credence to creationist claims, although this must be addressed to some extent, but how the MOTB becomes party to a disturbing misrepresentation of Jews and Judaism at the AiG attractions.
Read MoreWeek in Review (1/26/18)
Vaulted ceiling painting | Bathhouse at Qusayr Amra, Jordan | Image Source
Vaulted ceiling painting | Bathhouse at Qusayr Amra, Jordan | Image Source
This Week: Museum of the Bible, ancient Christian martyrs, demons, race and ethnicity, #digitalhumanities 3D monasteries – and more!
The Museum of Whose Bible? On the Perils of Turning Theology into History
"While making pretenses to neutrality, the Museum of the Bible is fundamentally a political project attempting to define what the Bible is and who owns it."
Read MoreThe Museum of the Bible as Mediator of Judaism
This panel sparked further discussion among scholars and the broader public, such as in a Washington Post article. In collaboration with AJR, scholars from this panel will be sharing their work with the larger scholarly community and the public.
Read MoreBook Note | Greek and Latin Narratives about the Ancient Martyrs
With respect to this important set of late antique sources, Éric Rebillard’s texts, translations, and commentary of the most ancient martyr texts preserved in Latin and Greek are a valuable addition to the scholarly toolkit.
Read MoreWeek in Review (1/19/18)
Ben Sira, from the Fugger Honorary | Illustration from the workshop of Jörg Breu, c.1545-49 | Image Source
Ben Sira, from the Fugger Honorary | Illustration from the workshop of Jörg Breu, c.1545-49 | Image Source
This Week: Reviews galore, Cairo Genizah, #pedagogy, a fabulous digital festschrift for a pivotal scholar of Second Temple Judaism – and more!
Read MoreOn Ben Wright and the Modeling of Scholarship
Sean Adams (“On Ben Wright and the Modeling of Scholarship”) engages Ben’s work on genre theory to consider how the Letter of Aristeas might be read alongside Greek symposia, and offers a retrospective on the work and example of an inspiring teacher.
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