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Christopher Jones deposited Syllabus: Jewish and Christian Scriptures in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoSyllabus for my course Jewish and Christian Scriptures at Augustana College. Most students who take the course are non-majors, and they take it to fulfill their “Christian Traditions” requirement. I focus on reading primary sources (both biblical and extra-canonical), supplementing with Bible Odyssey materials and pre-recorded online lectures.
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Andrew Radde-Gallwitz deposited Private Creeds and their Troubled Authors in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis article defends the disputed label “private creeds” as a useful one for describing a number of fourth century texts. Offering such a confession was the normal method for clearing one’s name on charges of heterodoxy in fourth-century Greek Christianity, though writing such a creed made the author susceptible to charges of innovation. A numbe…[Read more]
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simeon chavel deposited A Kingdom of Priests and Its Earthen Altars in Exodus 19–24 in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoArgues that, reversing the trope of subjects visiting the magnificent, the Elohistic history has Yahweh interested in the simplest, flimsiest altars only, which he will visit when and where he is invited to do so. The implication rules out temple-altars and temples for their royal sponsorship.
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simeon chavel deposited Prophetic Imagination in the Light of Narratology and Disability Studies in Isaiah 40–48 in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoAnalyzes Isaiah 40–48 as a single literary work through levels of speakers (frame and subordinate) with implications for its construction of divine potency and communication.
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Andrew Radde-Gallwitz deposited Gregory of Nyssa, In diem natalem (Draft translation, May 2017) in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis is the first English translation of Gregory of Nyssa’s Christmas homily, In diem natalem Salvatoris. It will be published in Mark DelCogliano, ed. The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings, Volume 3: Christ.
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Sean Burrus deposited Remembering the Righteous: Sarcophagus Sculpture and Jewish Patrons in the Roman World (Full Text) in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoA Ph.D. dissertation considering nearly 200 sarcophagi from the late ancient necropoleis of Jewish communities at Beth She’arim and Rome. This corpus captures a wide range of the possibilities open to Jewish patrons as they went about acquiring or commissioning a sarcophagus and sculptural program. The variety reflects not only the different…[Read more]
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Sean Burrus deposited What is ‘Jewish’ about Jewish art? Art and identity on late ancient sarcophagi from Rome in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoA paper delivered at in the 2017 Colloquia of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Considers how a group of sarcophagi from the Jewish catacombs of Rome reflect on the subject of Jewish art and Jewish patrons in Late Antiquity.
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Sean Burrus deposited Jews, Greeks and Romans: Being Jewish in the Classical World in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoWhat did it mean to ‘be Jewish’ in the Greco-Roman world? Jews, Greeks and Romans will explore the myriad ways that Jewish communities across the Mediterranean engaged with Greco-Roman culture and constructed their own ways of being Jewish. Using texts, artifacts and images–from rabbinic commentaries to Roman catacombs–we will investigate…[Read more]
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Sean Burrus deposited Remembering the Righteous: Sarcophagus Sculpture and Jewish Patrons in the Roman World (Front-matter + Conclusions) in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoFront-matter and conclusions to my Ph.D. Dissertation (2017). The project considers nearly 200 sarcophagi from the late ancient necropoleis of Jewish communities at Beth She’arim and Rome. This corpus captures a wide range of the possibilities open to Jewish patrons as they went about acquiring or commissioning a sarcophagus and sculptural…[Read more]
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David Congdon deposited The Nature of the Church in Theological Interpretation: Culture, Volk, and Mission in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoIn a 2012 article on Bultmann and Augustine, R. W. L. Moberly argued that the church should be understood as a “plausibility structure” for faith and thus a presupposition for the interpretation of Scripture. My response to him in 2014 addressed misinterpretations of Bultmann but did not speak to the central issue of the church as a pre…[Read more]
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Yitzhaq Feder deposited The Defilement of Dina: Uncontrolled Passions, Textual Violence, and the Search for Moral Foundations in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoThe story of Dinah’s violation in Genesis 34 has elicited radically different evaluations among exegetes. The present article attributes these divergent readings to the existence of distinct voices or moral positions in the text, particularly in relation to the issue of intermarriage. Beginning with a synchronic literary and ideological analysis o…[Read more]
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Yitzhaq Feder deposited The Semantics of Purity in the Ancient Near East: Lexical Meaning as a Projection of Embodied Experience in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoThis article analyzes the primary terms for purity in Biblical Hebrew, Ugaritic, Sumerian, Akkadian and Hittite. Building on insights from cognitive linguistics and embodiment theory, this study develops the premise that semantic structure – even of seemingly abstract concepts– is grounded in real-world bodily experience. An examination of pur…[Read more]
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Yitzhaq Feder deposited Contagion and Cognition: Bodily Experience and the Conceptualization of Pollution (ṭum’ah) in the Hebrew Bible in the group
Biblical Studies on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoIn this study, I apply embodiment theory as a framework for reconstructing the origins of the Israelite notion of pollution (ṭum’ah). Despite the fact that the Hebrew Bible describes a diverse array of sources of pollution – including bodily conditions, moral offenses and foreign cult practices, most modern studies attempt to find a single organ…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited The Night Rabbi Aqiba Slept With Two Women in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoIn the rabbinic worldview, man goes through life surrounded by temptation. The world is a place where temptation lurks on every street corner, at every table, and at every moment. For the rabbis, Torah – both Written and Oral – is the solution to controlling the yeẓer (יצר), the inclination to act on one’s desires. The ability to control on…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited Home is Where the Hearth Is?: Jewish Household Sacrifice as Appropriation in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoHousehold sacrifice is a common feature of the ancient Mediterranean. While offerings are made in temples, a home altar is a frequent sacrificial site. This raises an intriguing question for scholars of Judaism in antiquity: do Jews also sacrifice on household altars? While Judaism in antiquity is riotously diverse, it often looks very much like…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited Cities of the Sea: In Search of כרכי הים in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoIn this essay, I attempt to inscribe the mysterious location known as “the cities of the sea” (כרכי הים) onto the map of rabbinic scholarship. Classical rabbinic authors look toward this mythic locale for three reasons: (1) to discuss tales of sin (and sometimes salvation); (2) to offer definitions and clarifications of obscure words; and (3) to…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited Jewish Meals in Antiquity in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoA discussion of rabbinic meal practices.
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited Kosher Olive Oil in Antiquity Reconsidered in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoJosephus attests several times to a Jewish aversion to the use of Gentile olive oil. In m. ‘Abod. Zar. 2:6, this practice is first advocated and then immediately reversed by Rabbi and his court. What is the rationale for this sudden leniency with regard to Gentile olive oil? In a well-known article entitled “Kosher Olive Oil in Antiquity,” Marti…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited From Their Bread to Their Bed: Commensality, Intermarriage, and Idolatry in Tannaitic Literature in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoIn the tannaitic corpus, a novel innovation appears: sharing bread is understood to lead to sharing a bed. As such, the Tannaim problematise and marginalise commensal interactions between Jews and non-Jews. In several instances, commensality with non-Jews is equated with idolatry, the binary opposite of Jewishness in rabbinic literature. While…[Read more]
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Jordan Rosenblum deposited Justifications for Foodways and the Study of Commensality in the group
Ancient Jew Review on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoJustifications for foodways are too often ignored in the academic study of commensality. In seeking to understand how a particular group constructs the rules around the table – what, how, and with whom one will or will not eat – the rationales for these rules must be factored into any scholarly analysis. In this essay, I use the example of anc…[Read more]
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