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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

December 6, 2022

Literary Theory and the New Testament

by Angela Zautcke in Review, Book Notes


François Bonvin, Still Life with Book, Papers and Inkwell (1876) The National Gallery, London.

François Bonvin, Still Life with Book, Papers and Inkwell (1876) The National Gallery, London.

Throughout Literary Theory and the New Testament, Dinkler builds a persuasive case for the contributions literary theory continues to make to the field of New Testament studies.

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TAGS: reviews


December 1, 2022

The Journey of Christianity to India in Late Antiquity: Networks and the Movement of Culture

by Michelle Christian in Review, Book Notes


A stamp featuring Thomas the Apostle issued by the Postal Department of India in 1964 [Wikimedia].

A stamp featuring Thomas the Apostle issued by the Postal Department of India in 1964 [Wikimedia].

The Journey of Christianity to India in Late Antiquity is a compelling take on how some Christians imagined an interconnected late ancient world.

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TAGS: reviews


November 28, 2022

Jewish and Christian Women in the Ancient Mediterranean

by Alexiana Fry in Book Notes, Review


The authors explore in detail the roles women played, attending to commonalities and particularities of “Jew and Gentile” women. From the very beginning, the authors take great care to guide those who will teach from this textbook, and they are explicit about the book’s scope and limitations. Readers will find not only a useful primer for studying gender within ancient texts, but also, a detailed account of the various ways in which readers and students themselves interpret these texts.

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November 20, 2022

The Spirit within Me: Self and Agency in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism

by Rebecca Harris in Book Notes, Review


“In this innovative and deeply engaging study, Newsom sparks new ways of thinking about models of moral agency in biblical and early Jewish literature and paves the way for a broader application of the analysis that considers Jewish literature composed in Greek or the literature of other cultures.”

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TAGS: reviews


November 14, 2022

The Politics of Roman Memory: From the Fall of the Western Empire to the Age of Justinian

by Caroline Crews in Review, Book Notes


Image of Roman ruins in Rome by Lorenzoclick [Flickr].

Image of Roman ruins in Rome by Lorenzoclick [Flickr].

What did being Roman mean after 476? And how did the notion that the Roman empire could fall shape political rhetoric in the east?

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November 9, 2022

The Narrative Shape of Emotion in the Preaching of John Chrysostom

by Michelle Freeman in Review, Book Notes


Paul Cézanne, The Magdalen (or Sorrow)/La Douleur (ca. 1868-1869) Musée d'Orsay [Wikimedia].


Paul Cézanne, The Magdalen (or Sorrow)/La Douleur (ca. 1868-1869) Musée d'Orsay [Wikimedia].


Weaving together studies of emotion, homiletics, and biblical exegesis, this work offers an important analysis of a recurrent theme in Chrysostom’s preaching.

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November 7, 2022

Memory in a Time of Prose

by Jillian Stinchcomb in Book Notes, Review


By focusing on known dynamics of memory and archaeological evidence, Pioske brings together sometimes-disparate methodological considerations to make a persuasive case for how one might engage in a historically and theoretically responsible way with the knowledge claims made in early Hebrew texts.

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November 1, 2022

Eusebius and Empire: Constructing Church and Rome in the Ecclesiastical History

by Ben Sheppard in Review, Book Notes


Canaletto, Rome: The Arch of Constantine (1742) Royal Collection [Wikimedia].

Canaletto, Rome: The Arch of Constantine (1742) Royal Collection [Wikimedia].

Corke-Webster argues that the History reflects Eusebius’ particular socio-political circumstances during the first quarter of the fourth century.

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October 31, 2022

Institutionalized Routine Prayers at Qumran: Fact or Assumption?

by Patrick Angiolillo in Book Notes, Review


[H]is project does bring to the fore the question of what these terms—as classificatory labels—might have meant to the ancient authors who used them, and, perhaps more within our control, what they mean for scholars today. If our evidence seems to resist our current attempts at classification, perhaps we need to rethink how we are classifying.

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October 27, 2022

Author’s Musings: Bringing Down the Temple House

by Marjorie Lehman in Articles


Marjorie Lehman shares the formative context of feminist scholarship and the pandemic that guided her work on Bavli Yoma.

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TAGS: publications


October 24, 2022

Accessing the Ancient Mediterranean Studies Classroom

by Daniel C. Smith in Articles


Roman geometric mosaic floor, from Conimbriga, Portugal. Image by Carole Raddato.

Roman geometric mosaic floor, from Conimbriga, Portugal. Image by Carole Raddato.

When it came to material culture, I faced another set of accessibility-related roadblocks. I had come to internalize the perspective from the opening of this essay: material culture constituted an evidentiary corpus for which vision was a precondition for insightful analysis. Such an opinion has an ancient pedigree.

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TAGS: essays


October 20, 2022

Unexpected Influences with Mira Balberg

by Mira Balberg in Articles


'Nof Kibbutz' by Yohanan Simon

'Nof Kibbutz' by Yohanan Simon

Mira Balberg shares an unexpected influence upon her work with rabbinic literature.

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TAGS: Unexpected Influences


October 17, 2022

Sacred Stimulus: Jerusalem in the Visual Christianization of Rome

by Ian Kinman in Review, Book Notes


View of the interior of Santa Costanza in Rome (Wikimedia © José Luiz Bernardes Ribeiro).

View of the interior of Santa Costanza in Rome (Wikimedia © José Luiz Bernardes Ribeiro).

Noga-Banai structures her study around repeated journeys between Jerusalem and Rome from the first through fifth centuries, tracing a period from subtle to increasingly assured visual appropriation of memories and tropes, culminating in a self-assured and assertive Rome confident in its identity as the perceived historical center of the Christian movement.

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TAGS: reviews


October 12, 2022

Dissertation Spotlight | Disputation as Out-Narration

by Brad Boswell in Articles


The beginning of Cyril of Alexandria’s Antirrhetica adversus Julianum from Parisinus graecus 1261 [Image courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France].

The beginning of Cyril of Alexandria’s Antirrhetica adversus Julianum from Parisinus graecus 1261 [Image courtesy of Bibliothèque nationale de France].

The implications for our understanding of Julian and Cyril, as well as the ancient traditions they represented and maintained, are enormous. But the implications extend further still, as should be clear from my concluding list of possible indicators that suggest narrative conflict may be at play between rival traditions, past or otherwise.

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TAGS: dissertation


October 3, 2022

Charity in Rabbinic Judaism

by Dov Kahane in Book Notes


“In sum, Gray is a careful and intuitive reader and teacher of rabbinic text creating cogent and compelling arguments which support her conclusions about the interplay and shift in rabbinic values and theology on charity.”

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TAGS: reviews


September 29, 2022

Do Rabbis Belong in Early Jewish Christian Relations?

by Krista Dalton in Articles


“In doing so, this scholarship reinforces a hegemonic Christian perspective that assumes that scholars of Christianity can speak on behalf of Jews because they are peripheral or secondary aids to the study of Christianity. It is a different but just as pernicious form of Jewish erasure that must be reckoned with.”

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September 28, 2022

The Eye, the Sense of Sight, and Seeing God? Reflections on God’s (In)visibility Considering Early Jewish Christian Relations

by Deborah Forger in Articles


“As scholars of early Jewish-Christian relations, how much of our identities should we reveal? Which, of course, lies at the heart of the question: What are the opportunities, pitfalls, joys, and challenges of incorporating our subjectivity and identities into our scholarship?”

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September 21, 2022

"The Parting of the Ways": Reflections on the Journey

by Judith M. Lieu in Articles


“From an a priori perspective, this is not what the epithet “the Parting of the Ways” does; rather, it imposes an understanding rather than proves itself as an effective analogy. We need only consider the arguments that in relation to communities of Jesus believers which were predominately or entirely of gentile origin, there could be no parting of the ways: hence, it pertains only to those contexts where the majority had identified or still did identify themselves as Jews, presumably in terms of their genealogical inheritance.”

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September 19, 2022

The Study of Early Jewish Christian Relations: Then and Now A personal reflection

by Adele Reinhartz in Articles


“Perhaps the perennial focus on theological issues stems from a narrow, one might say non-Jewish, understanding of Judaism. If we instead took a more expansive view of Judaism as pertaining not to a religion in the modern sense but rather to the many aspects of life that Jews considered to be governed by Torah, we might also broaden our consideration of early Jewish Christian relations to include economic and cultural relationships.”

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September 19, 2022

Careers in Jewish Christian Relations

by Ancient Jew Review in Articles


At the 2021 annual meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature, two senior scholars (Adele Reinhartz and Judith Lieu) and two junior scholars (Deborah Forger and Krista Dalton) whose work relates to the study of early Jews and Christians convened to reflect upon their career trajectories.

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TAGS: conference


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