Search
  • Articles
  • Forums
  • Pedagogy
  • Podcast
  • Reviews
  • MOP
  • About
Close
Menu
Search
Close
  • Articles
  • Forums
  • Pedagogy
  • Podcast
  • Reviews
  • MOP
  • About
Menu

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

September 6, 2020

Book Note I Growing Up in Ancient Israel: Children in Material Culture and Biblical Texts

by Caralie Focht in Book Notes


The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Read More

September 2, 2020

Mishnah, Midrash, and How to Read Tannaitic Literature

by Ishay Rosen-Zvi in Articles


“What is the conception of Torah that allows for the creation of such an expansive legal system that is detached from the Bible?”

Read More

TAGS: publications


August 31, 2020

Make Your Own Magical Papyrus

by Geoffrey Smith in Articles


main.png
main.png

“To give students a feel for the materiality of ancient magic, I decided this year to walk them through the process of making a magical papyrus using materials similar to those used in antiquity.”

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 26, 2020

‘Parchment-Packages’ in The Jewish Jesus Class: Pedagogical Practices in the Digital Age

by Deborah Forger in Articles


Photo by Robert Gill, Dartmouth College

Photo by Robert Gill, Dartmouth College

Photo by Robert Gill, Dartmouth College

Photo by Robert Gill, Dartmouth College

“Since so much of my own interest in the ancient world has been fostered by encounters with various forms of material culture, I wanted to ensure that even though my students would be taking this class virtually, they would still have tangible materials to see, touch, feel, and even smell.”

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 24, 2020

Incantation Bowls and Embodied Knowledge

by Krista Dalton in Articles


“It was important to me that my students see incantation bowls as more than symbols, or even just textual incantations, but as a real form of knowledge embodied in relationships between human subjects, divine beings, and material objects.”

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 20, 2020

Ancient Muses and Student Poets: Storytelling in Verse

by Erin Galgay Walsh in Articles


Nikos Engonopoulos, Poet and Muse (1938) [Wikimedia].

Nikos Engonopoulos, Poet and Muse (1938) [Wikimedia].

Nikos Engonopoulos, Poet and Muse (1938) [Wikimedia].

Nikos Engonopoulos, Poet and Muse (1938) [Wikimedia].

Late antique poets – with their penchant for storytelling and dramatization – offered students plenty of examples to emulate.

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 19, 2020

Thinking Materially: Making Ostraca in the Classroom

by Patrick Angiolillo in Articles


“I took this as an opportunity to think with my students about writing as a physical enterprise and text as material artifact. To accomplish this, I decided I would have my students make their own ostraca (sg. ostracon), or small sherds of inscribed pottery, in class."

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 11, 2020

Pedagogy | Teaching Archive Trouble

by Blossom Stefaniw in Articles


The Leeds Library - Photo by Michael Beckwith (Flickr)

The Leeds Library - Photo by Michael Beckwith (Flickr)

The Leeds Library - Photo by Michael Beckwith (Flickr)

The Leeds Library - Photo by Michael Beckwith (Flickr)

Where do we get the texts that we have? Is the archive a neutral record of the past? How does the archive serve a quest for knowledge of the past? How does it interact with time, identity, and the social world?

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 10, 2020

Materiality of Death and Afterlife: Visit to Local Cemetery

by Hanna Tervanotko in Articles


Grave marker of Josiah Leavitt, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Grave marker of Josiah Leavitt, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Grave marker of Josiah Leavitt, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Grave marker of Josiah Leavitt, courtesy of Wikipedia.

Teaching a course on a topic like “Death and Afterlife” offers a unique opportunity to engage with students. While in other courses students may feel intimidated for lacking content expertise, typically everyone has some experience with death and mourning.

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 4, 2020

Moodle Midrash

by Daniel Picus in Articles


Midrash Tanchuma title page, 1563 Mantua printing. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Midrash Tanchuma title page, 1563 Mantua printing. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Midrash Tanchuma title page, 1563 Mantua printing. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Midrash Tanchuma title page, 1563 Mantua printing. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

By asking the students to reflect critically on their own interpretations, they gained a much sharper awareness of the perspectives of their own questions: what are the different stakes that are present in the text, for different readers? What did it mean to read is a “scholar,” and what did it mean to read as a “believer?” What were the locations where those stakes overlapped, and what did that tell us about the enterprise’s entire construction?

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


August 3, 2020

The Meme Bible

by James Walters in Articles


James Walters shares his assignment for “memeing” the Bible.

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


June 29, 2020

Book Note | When Christians Were Jews

by Shayna Sheinfeld in Book Notes


39096921._UY1394_SS1394_.jpg
39096921._UY1394_SS1394_.jpg

Paula Fredriksen’s newest book attempts a difficult feat: to understand the first generation of Jesus followers, despite having to do so with an eclectic smattering of passionately biased evidence that also happens to have been cherished as sacred text by almost two thousand years of interpreters.

Read More

June 25, 2020

Dissertation Spotlight | Christianizing Knowledge

by Mark Letteney in Articles


Panel from an ivory dyptich of Rufius Probianus, who was vicarius urbis Romae around 400 CE. [Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Ms. theol. lat. fol. 323, Buchkasten].

Panel from an ivory dyptich of Rufius Probianus, who was vicarius urbis Romae around 400 CE. [Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Ms. theol. lat. fol. 323, Buchkasten].

Panel from an ivory dyptich of Rufius Probianus, who was vicarius urbis Romae around 400 CE. [Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Ms. theol. lat. fol. 323, Buchkasten].

Panel from an ivory dyptich of Rufius Probianus, who was vicarius urbis Romae around 400 CE. [Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Ms. theol. lat. fol. 323, Buchkasten].

There are several ways to think about the rise of Christianity. I have chosen to tell this story in this manner because I think that it helps to elucidate a number of fascinating shifts in late antiquity, and some of the shifts that I detail continue to reverberate today.

Read More

TAGS: dissertation


June 22, 2020

Book Note | The World Between Empires: Art and Identity in the Ancient Middle East

by Alex Istok in Book Notes


Aedicula for Aglibol and Malakbel (236 CE) [Image courtesy of the author].

Aedicula for Aglibol and Malakbel (236 CE) [Image courtesy of the author]

Aedicula for Aglibol and Malakbel (236 CE) [Image courtesy of the author].

Aedicula for Aglibol and Malakbel (236 CE) [Image courtesy of the author]

The curators of the exhibit and authors of this catalogue resist the urge to classify objects by these two great empires (“Roman” or “Parthian”) and, instead shift the focus to the local vicinity they reflect.

Read More

June 17, 2020

Trees and Text: A Material Ecocritical Exploration of Gen. 2:4b–3:24 in The Green Bible

by Robin Hamon in Articles


greenbible.jpg
greenbible.jpg

While these two analytical approaches are ostensibly discrete they represent two modes of inquiry that are unique to material ecocritical discourse: ‘matter in text’ and ‘matter as text’, respectively. This approach places trees at the center of my study; narrated trees are the focus of my textual analysis of Gen. 2:4b–3:24 and real-world trees are the primary natural material from which the text of the Green Bible is manufactured.

Read More

TAGS: dissertation


June 15, 2020

Religious Studies and Rabbinics

by Mika Ahuvia in Book Notes


images.jpeg
images.jpeg

An exemplary conference volume for scholars of rabbinics, religious studies, and all those curious about these fields of study.

Read More

June 11, 2020

Book Note | Votive Body Parts in Greek and Roman Religion

by Scott Possiel in Book Notes


Roman Votive Offering [Wikimedia Commons]

Roman Votive Offering [Wikimedia Commons]

Roman Votive Offering [Wikimedia Commons]

Roman Votive Offering [Wikimedia Commons]

As some of the most numerous, widespread, and striking objects associated with the practice of religion in the ancient world, anatomical votives have appeared in many studies of the classical and late antique Mediterranean.

Read More

June 8, 2020

Using the Digital Syriac Corpus for Online Syriac Instruction

by James E. Walters in Articles


Have you found your Syriac course suddenly converted to an online course? If so, the Digital Syriac Corpus is here to help!

Read More

TAGS: pedagogy


June 3, 2020

Rewriting and (Re)negotiating Gender: A Study of the Depictions of the Matriarchs in the Book of Jubilees

by Chontel Syfox in Articles


Hans Schilling, “Judith Beheading Holofernes” (detail) in Barlaam and Josaphat, 1469. J. Paul Getty Museum.

Hans Schilling, “Judith Beheading Holofernes” (detail) in Barlaam and Josaphat, 1469. J. Paul Getty Museum.

Hans Schilling, “Judith Beheading Holofernes” (detail) in Barlaam and Josaphat, 1469. J. Paul Getty Museum.

Hans Schilling, “Judith Beheading Holofernes” (detail) in Barlaam and Josaphat, 1469. J. Paul Getty Museum.

My dissertation seeks to identify the motives and priorities that guided the author of Jubilees in his rewriting of the biblical stories concerning the matriarchs and asks if Jubilees was unique in its foregrounding of female characters or dealt with them in a manner that was typical of the then literary Zeitgeist.

Read More

TAGS: dissertation


June 1, 2020

Book Note | Jewish Childhood in the Roman World

by Daniel Golde in Book Notes


GUEST_f9f48f85-2b44-48cf-a593-791ed5362fd0.jpeg
GUEST_f9f48f85-2b44-48cf-a593-791ed5362fd0.jpeg

Jewish Childhood in the Roman World provides a comprehensive review of the Palestinian rabbinic literature on the many facets of childhood.

Read More

  • Newer
  • Older
Index
Publications RSS

© 2025 Ancient Jew Review.