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ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

Featured
Strike: A 2025 SBL Review Panel
Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie
Apr 20, 2026
Strike: A 2025 SBL Review Panel
Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie
Apr 20, 2026

The following remarks were delivered at a book review panel on November 22, 2025, at the Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting in Boston.

Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie
Apr 20, 2026

Featured
The Minutiae of Progress and the Detritus of Change: On Bond’s Labor History of the Ancient Mediterranean
Apr 22, 2026
Jennifer Quigley
The Minutiae of Progress and the Detritus of Change: On Bond’s Labor History of the Ancient Mediterranean
Apr 22, 2026
Jennifer Quigley

I think this needs to be a multilayered conversation. On the one hand, religion is both used by elites for regulatory function, bureaucratic specialization, and legal structuring, and by non-elites to inspire collective action or to provide social cohesion.

Apr 22, 2026
Jennifer Quigley
Ancient Associations and Collective Labor Action in Sarah Bond’s Strike
Apr 20, 2026
Richard Last
Ancient Associations and Collective Labor Action in Sarah Bond’s Strike
Apr 20, 2026
Richard Last

First, the initial three chapters, which cover the Roman Republic, read like a new history of Rome, one that shows how ingrained collective labor action really was in Roman society.

Apr 20, 2026
Richard Last
A Response to Sarah Bond's Strike!
Apr 20, 2026
Laura Nasrallah
A Response to Sarah Bond's Strike!
Apr 20, 2026
Laura Nasrallah

Prof. Sarah Bond is perpetually unsurprised at abuses of power, yet she is also perpetually ethically aggrieved by them. Her new book, Strike! is grounded in an ethical interest in the historical abuses of power on two levels: the abuse of power in the ancient Mediterranean world, and the witting or unwitting power of historians to write out of the record of the ancient Mediterranean the possibility of resistance, organizing, and the agency of laborers.

Apr 20, 2026
Laura Nasrallah
Strike: A 2025 SBL Review Panel
Apr 20, 2026
Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie
Strike: A 2025 SBL Review Panel
Apr 20, 2026
Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie

The following remarks were delivered at a book review panel on November 22, 2025, at the Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting in Boston.

Apr 20, 2026
Agnes Choi and Tony Keddie
 Earthquakes and Gardens Forum: A Response
Apr 17, 2026
Virginia Burrus
Earthquakes and Gardens Forum: A Response
Apr 17, 2026
Virginia Burrus

Earthquakes and Gardens is a deeply idiosyncratic book. It is experimental in a number of ways, and experiments do not always succeed—certainly not for every reader.

Apr 17, 2026
Virginia Burrus
Falling to Pieces
Apr 14, 2026
Paige Spencer
Falling to Pieces
Apr 14, 2026
Paige Spencer

Burrus urges us to curate earthquakes, but I also wonder if she asks us to consider whether we might be more earthquake than curator. How much of our control is an illusion? How different are we from the rest of the world?

Apr 14, 2026
Paige Spencer
Haunted Reading(s): A Response to Earthquakes and Gardens
Apr 14, 2026
Robert Paul Seesengood
Haunted Reading(s): A Response to Earthquakes and Gardens
Apr 14, 2026
Robert Paul Seesengood

Burrus wildly and intentionally reads Jerome and Hilarion forward alongside contemporary art, histories of cartography, and modern sciences of geology and seismology. She cites artifacts and photographs from affiliated but not scholarly-verified sites in Cyprus.

Apr 14, 2026
Robert Paul Seesengood
Building a Garden Nest: Burrus’s Hagiogeography of Jerome’s Hilarion
Apr 13, 2026
Midori Hartman
Building a Garden Nest: Burrus’s Hagiogeography of Jerome’s Hilarion
Apr 13, 2026
Midori Hartman

Using the idea of recursive connection to a locus—a place—that is also a time, a feeling, a sensation—Burrus invites us to see other connections beyond ancient hagiography and into other quasi-historical imaginariums.

Apr 13, 2026
Midori Hartman
Featured
The Fourth Synoptic Gospel: John’s Knowledge of Matthew, Mark, and Luke
Tyler Blaine Wilson
Apr 8, 2026
The Fourth Synoptic Gospel: John’s Knowledge of Matthew, Mark, and Luke
Tyler Blaine Wilson
Apr 8, 2026

In The Fourth Synoptic Gospel, Mark Goodacre challenges this perspective and attempts to demonstrate that the author of the fourth gospel was not only aware of the Synoptic Gospels but also used them in the writing of their gospel text.

Tyler Blaine Wilson
Apr 8, 2026
Seneca’s Affective Cosmos: Subjectivity, Feeling, and Knowledge in the Natural Questions and Beyond
Morgan Hundley
Apr 6, 2026
Seneca’s Affective Cosmos: Subjectivity, Feeling, and Knowledge in the Natural Questions and Beyond
Morgan Hundley
Apr 6, 2026

Graf serves as an able guide for readers through the complex ideas of Stoicism, Seneca’s philosophical vision, and affect theory. Readers less familiar with Senecan ideas will likely find this book a helpful introduction.

Morgan Hundley
Apr 6, 2026
Unfinished Christians: Ritual Objects and Silent Subjects in Late Antiquity
Ethan Laster
Apr 1, 2026
Unfinished Christians: Ritual Objects and Silent Subjects in Late Antiquity
Ethan Laster
Apr 1, 2026

In Unfinished Christians, Frank focuses on literary records produced in and for shared spaces, liturgical and otherwise, where ordinary Christians would have gathered for various religious rites.

Ethan Laster
Apr 1, 2026
Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae/Palaestinae, Volume V: Galilaea and Northern Regions
D. Clint Burnett
Mar 9, 2026
Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae/Palaestinae, Volume V: Galilaea and Northern Regions
D. Clint Burnett
Mar 9, 2026

The intended audience for CIIP 5 consists of scholars specializing in the study of early Judaism, early to late antique Christianity, and the early Islamic period. However, given that every inscription is translated into English, non-specialists interested in any of these time periods in this location will benefit from this epigraphic collection.

D. Clint Burnett
Mar 9, 2026
Review | Berkovitz, A Life of Psalms in Jewish Late Antiquity
Spencer J. Elliott
Feb 18, 2026
Review | Berkovitz, A Life of Psalms in Jewish Late Antiquity
Spencer J. Elliott
Feb 18, 2026

He moves the question of reception away from strictly exegetical approaches that look for a history of interpretation within a world of ideas, and towards how Jews in Late Antiquity encountered physical scrolls of psalms, how they incorporated them into their liturgical practices, and how psalms played a role in practical religion (e.g., piety and magic).

Spencer J. Elliott
Feb 18, 2026

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