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Ekaitz Ruiz de Vergara Olmos started the topic Call for Chapters: “Furor Poeticus”: Divine Inspiration in Modern Literature in the discussion
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 1 year, 11 months agoCall for Book Chapters: “Furor Poeticus”: Divine Inspiration in Modern Literature and Poetics
Furor poeticus is a modern name for an ancient idea. In his extant fragments, Democritus claims that the poet writes by divine inspiration (fr. 17) and that Homer’s greatness is due to his godlike nature (fr. 21). But the great systematiser of this…[Read more] -
Oscar Perea-Rodriguez deposited El «Libro de los pensamientos variables» como ejemplo de utopía y disidencia en el siglo XV in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 1 year, 11 months agoEl artículo analiza una curiosa obra titulada «Libro de los pensamientos variables», mezcla de prosa y verso y compuesta entre 1488 y 1492, que se conserva en un solo manuscrito de la Biblioteca Nacional de España (MSS/6442). Tras resumirse su contenido y sus principales inf luencias literarias, se intenta identificar a su posible autor como el…[Read more]
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Seo-Young Chu deposited Survivor-Shaped Specters and Gaps in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 1 year, 12 months ago“…survivors are disappearing from academia. Our schools, our syllabi, our classrooms, our bibliographies, our campuses, our research labs, our thesis committees, our libraries, our conference panels, our departments, our programs, and our monographs are riddled through and through with survivor-shaped gaps. Each gap is a place in academia where…[Read more]
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Oscar Perea-Rodriguez deposited Auge y caída de ‘lo’ judeoconverso en La Celestina: un debate en decadencia in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoMis conversaciones con Joseph T. Snow, nuestro querido Pepe Nieves, como él mismo nos insta a llamarlo desde el contacto inicial, generalmente tienen lugar en la cafetería de la Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid, un insólito locus amoenus en el cual el más habitual inquilino del pupitre 99 de la Sala María Moliner ejerce con bondad y simpatía su papel…[Read more]
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Ana Dumitran deposited Icoana Sfântului Ioan Botezătorul cu scene din viață de la Budești‑Josani in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoIn the history of old Romanian painting, the icon of Saint John the Baptist with scenes from his life from Budești‑Josani occupies a very important place due to its exceptional artistic quality, as well as the Slavonic inscription with the master’s signature and date. The inscription, in a very poor state of preservation, has already been part…[Read more]
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Ana Dumitran deposited Le patriarche Sylvestre d’Antioche, son disciple spirituel Constantin César Dapóntes et l’histoire de leurs icônes in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThis study identified the icon of Virgin Moscovita and the icon of the Holy Mandylion, described in Konstantinos Dapontes’ writings, with the icon of the Virgin and the icon of the Holy Mandylion preserved in his family monastery Evangelistria in Skopelos island. We can now retrace the “biography”of these two artefacts, the history of their creat…[Read more]
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Ana Dumitran deposited The Chronology of the Murals in the Râmeț Monastic Church (Alba County, Romania) Based on a Reevaluation of the Dating of the Narthex Inscription in the group
Cultural Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoLa découverte d’une inscription slavonne dans le narthex de l’église du monastère de Râmeț (comté d’Alba) en 1966, sa relecture avec des moyens techniques spéciaux en 1978 et sa publication officielle en 1985 ont porté à l’attention des historiens le nom du peintre (Mihul du Criș-Blanc), le nom de l’évêque fondateur (archevêque Gélase),…[Read more]
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Michael Miller deposited Bishop Allan Wilson Cook (Rabbi Haling Hank Lenht), Queen Malinda Morris, and the Independent Church of God: A Missing Piece in the History of Hebrew Israelite Black Judaism in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThis article examines two figures from the early twentieth century
beginnings of the Hebrew Israelite movement. Malinda Morris
was a central, though forgotten, figure in William Crowdy’s
Church of God and Saints of Christ but her creation of an
independent Church upon Crowdy’s death has not so far been
discussed. The strongest body of evi…[Read more] -
Michael Miller deposited Layers of Liminality and Marginality in the African Hebrew Israelite Community in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoUsing the theoretical frames of liminality and marginality I discuss the African Hebrew Israelites’ journey from American underclass, to stateless wanderers, to Israeli citizens.
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Chris A. Kramer deposited New Populism, New Conspiracism, and the Old Rhetoric of Purity in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThis entry investigates the connections between neo-populism and neo-conspiracism in the USA. One central thread is the rhetoric of purity that fosters rigid dichotomies of thought about identities, contributing to both populism and conspiracism, eliciting a neologism: conspirapopulism.
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Matthew Korpman deposited “Preaching A Black Christ: Doing Black Theology with Ellen White.” Pages 95-108 in A House on Fire: How Adventist Faith Responds to Race and Racism. Edited by Nathan Brown and Maury Jackson. Signs Publishing, 2022. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThis chapter explores the contribution of the Seventh-day Adventist theologian/preacher Ellen White to Black Theology by comparing her early 19th century work to the later writings of James Cone. An argument is put forward that White intuited many of the insights that Cone would later formulate, demonstrating both that White can be a valuable…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “William Foy and the Apocrypha: Demonstrating Ellen White’s Early Belief in the Authority of 2 Esdras,” Spectrum 51.2 (2023): 12-17. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoAn analysis of William Foy’s visions are compared with Ellen White’s, noting that the two shared the same vision. Both visions are ultimately traced to the apocryphal work of 2 Esdras, popular among Millerites, allowing us to analyze how both Foy and White utilized the Apocrypha in their visionary renditions. Furthermore, this analysis sheds light…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “Satan’s Flying Machines: Ellen White and Airplanes,” Adventist Today 31.1 (2023): 21-25. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThe White Estate early on was aware of a report by some Adventists that claimed, as eyewitnesses, that Ellen White had (during a camp-meeting during May 1-10 of 1908) declared that: “Any one killed from an aeroplane would be lost.” Although considered apocryphal by the Estate when first heard, it turns out that this statement is likely not fic…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “Re-Evaluating Ellen White’s Misunderstood Idea of the Shaking,” Adventist Today 31.2 (2023): 27-29. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoWithin the Seventh-day Adventist Church, a common conception is that Ellen White, one of the denomination’s three founders and a 19th-century female theologian, warned of a singular time in the future when a theological “shaking” would occur. However, by comparing all possible references to the word “shaking” (as well as associated ideas) in…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “Teaching the Gospel to Law Students,” Didaktikos: Journal of Theological Education 6.1 (2022): 8-10. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoA short peer-reviewed essay exploring my pedagogical approach at teaching a required Introduction to New Testament course for students at a Criminal Justice program. It outlines creative ways to engage students in biblical material by focusing attention on those aspects of it that directly relate to the legal profession and sensibility.
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Matthew Korpman deposited “Endorsing the Septuagint: Ellen White and Her Later Views of the Apocrypha,” Academia Letters (2022): 1-7. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoIn this short article, the later views of Ellen White toward the Apocrypha are explored, building on previous studies that have demonstrated her continued utilization of apocryphal works past 1850. It is argued that by examining her views on inspiration and a reference she makes to the Septuagint, a plausible understanding of her views about the…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “More Than An Afterthought: Adventists Addressing Climate Change,” Adventist Today 30.1 (2022): 21-23. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoA survey of Adventist church statements regarding church policy in the North American Division and World Church regarding Climate Change. It will be argued that unlike other policies the Adventist church supports, its statements on Climate Change lack the typical biblical support common for other initiatives and indicates a lack of spiritual…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “When God Wants Dis/obedience: Wrestling with Genesis 22,” Adventist Today 29.3 (2021): 12-15. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThe passage of Genesis 22 is reviewed and examined through four interpretive lenses: Narrative Criticism, Canonical Criticism, Historical Criticism, and a Hermeneutic of Confrontation. After reviewing extensively the history of child sacrifice in Ancient Israel, the argument of Omri Boehm’s reconstructed text (lacking the angelic speeches), and…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “What is “the Middle”? Theological Diversity in Valentinian Christianity,” Academia Letters (2021): 1-5. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoThis short-form article explores the various presentations of “the Middle” within Valentinian authored documents (the Gospel of Truth and Gospel of Philip) and sources which report about the Valentinians (Irenaeus and his report about Ptolemy’s theology). It suggests underscores the deep distinctions each view has and suggests that these may be…[Read more]
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Matthew Korpman deposited “The Protestant Reception of the Apocrypha.” Pages 74-93 in the Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha. Edited by Gerbern Oegema. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021. in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 2 years agoDiscussions about the history of the reception of the Apocrypha within Protestantism are often mired by blanket negative presumptions that differ markedly from the actual beliefs attested to in available historical sources. This chapter seeks to rectify such historical misrepresentations by presenting an initial attempt to summarize the entire…[Read more]
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