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

ANCIENT JEW REVIEW

August 6, 2018

Book Note | The Rabbinic Conversion of Judaism

by Yoni Nadiv in Book Notes


412FKJtaohL._SX326_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
412FKJtaohL._SX326_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Lavee argues for reading the conflicting attitudes of renewal and rejection as reflecting a Babylonian attitude of ‘genealogical anxiety,’ marking the convert as reborn so as to disassociate them from their natal families while in so doing marking them as the ‘eternal other.’

Read More

July 30, 2018

Book Note | Authority and Expertise in Ancient Scientific Culture

by Jessica Wright in Book Notes


510WlVdBrsL._SX348_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
510WlVdBrsL._SX348_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

As a whole, the volume provides compelling evidence that various, interrelated “techniques of self-authorisation” were employed across (what the modern reader might categorize as) different scientific and technical genres, as a means not only for professionals to establish their credentials, but also for non-professionals to situate themselves in the social and political networks of the late Republic and the Roman Empire.

Read More

July 23, 2018

Book Note | The Politics of Heresy in Ambrose of Milan

by Matthew Chalmers in Book Notes


Gerard Seghers (1591-1651) -  "The Four Doctors of the Western Church, Saint Ambrose" (Wikimedia Commons)

Gerard Seghers (1591-1651) -  "The Four Doctors of the Western Church, Saint Ambrose" (Wikimedia Commons)

Gerard Seghers (1591-1651) -  "The Four Doctors of the Western Church, Saint Ambrose" (Wikimedia Commons)

Gerard Seghers (1591-1651) -  "The Four Doctors of the Western Church, Saint Ambrose" (Wikimedia Commons)

Drawing on this scholarly paradigm shift, Williams argues that understanding Christianity in the Milan of Ambrose’s time requires manoeuvring around an object, “heresy,” successfully conjured into existence by Ambrose’s rhetoric.

Read More

July 15, 2018

Book Note | At the Temple Gates: The Religion of Freelance Experts in the Roman Empire

by Brigidda Bell in Book Notes


Unknown.jpeg
Unknown.jpeg

Wendt brings together, in accessible prose, a series of fascinating characters that have been neglected by many classical scholars, and who are largely absent in early Christian studies, under the etic category of “freelance religious expert.”

Read More

June 25, 2018

Book Note | Melania: Early Christianity Through the Life of One Family

by Jeannie Sellick in Book Notes


Unknown.jpeg
Unknown.jpeg

Melania, then, is a testament both to the impact the Melanias had on the nascent Christianity of the fourth century as well as the impact that Elizabeth Clark has had in shaping the study of that very world.

Read More

June 18, 2018

Book Note | Sexuality in the Babylonian Talmud

by Noah Bickart in Book Notes


511-kGQJBZL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
511-kGQJBZL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

The conclusion remains, as it does with many other cultural studies,[2] somewhat banal: Babylonian rabbis were caught somewhere between Christian Roman Palestine and Zoroastrian Persia.

Read More

June 3, 2018

Book Note | Prudentius, Spain, and Late Antique Christianity: Poetry, Visual Culture, and the Cult of the Martyrs

by Kathleen M. Kirsch in Book Notes


Unknown.jpeg
Unknown.jpeg

This book represents a step forward in Prudentian scholarship by situating the Peristephanon in its social and historical context.

Read More

May 21, 2018

Book Note | Raised on Christian Milk: Food and the Formation of the Soul in Early Christianity

by Dana Robinson in Book Notes


Figure from the sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, ca. 150 CE, Louvre Museum (Image courtesy of Marie-Lan Nguyen)

Figure from the sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, ca. 150 CE, Louvre Museum (Image courtesy of Marie-Lan Nguyen)

Figure from the sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, ca. 150 CE, Louvre Museum (Image courtesy of Marie-Lan Nguyen)

Figure from the sarcophagus of Marcus Cornelius Statius, ca. 150 CE, Louvre Museum (Image courtesy of Marie-Lan Nguyen)

Attention to the ways that the apparently natural is harnessed to specific cultural ideologies through our most basic metaphors of food is the first step in redefining what it means to “eat well.”  

Read More

May 14, 2018

Book Note | Rabbinic Body Language: Non-Verbal Communication in Palestinian Rabbinic Literature of Late Antiquity

by Erez DeGolan in Book Notes


9789004339064.jpg
9789004339064.jpg

Hezser treats body language exclusively and comprehensively, studying the phenomenon from head to toes and demonstrating its wide scope in classical rabbinic literature.

Read More

May 7, 2018

Book Note | Kingship and Memory in Ancient Judah

by Chance McMahon in Book Notes


kingship-and-memory-in-ancient-judah.jpg
kingship-and-memory-in-ancient-judah.jpg

Kingship and Memory in Ancient Judah is useful in reframing historiographic methods in biblical studies. Wilson aptly moves beyond the use of memory studies to merely determine the historicity of events of Israel’s past.

Read More

April 22, 2018

Book Note | Making Amulets Christian: Artefacts, Scribes, and Contexts

by Andrew Henry in Book Notes


Unknown.jpeg
Unknown.jpeg

Although many of the topics discussed in the book could shed light on ritual practice elsewhere in the Mediterranean world, de Bruyn limits himself to Egypt because this is where the bulk of textual amulets from this period are found.

Read More

April 16, 2018

Book Note | The Song of Songs and the Fashioning of Identity in Early Latin Christianity

by Michael Papazian in Book Notes


Unknown.jpeg
Unknown.jpeg

Shuve demonstrates that for some of its most prominent Latin readers, the Song was self-evidently an allegory about the Church and its purity.

Read More

April 9, 2018

Book Note | How Repentance Became Biblical

by Jillian Stinchcomb in Book Notes


61+GljRPkwL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
61+GljRPkwL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

In How Repentance Became Biblical, David Lambert argues that, rather than an inherently biblical concept, “repentance” came to be understood as such in a long process that continued into late antiquity.

Read More

April 2, 2018

Book Note | The Red Monastery Church: Beauty and Asceticism in Upper Egypt

by Candace Buckner in Book Notes


9780300212303.jpg
9780300212303.jpg

With essays from several renowned scholars of Coptology, Byzantine Studies, art history, anthropology, archaeology, and history, this volume seeks to present and preserve the marvels of the early Byzantine Red Monastery Church.

Read More

March 26, 2018

Book Note | From Adapa to Enoch: Scribal Culture and Religious Vision in Judea and Babylon

by Mark Lester in Book Notes


Odilon Redon [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Odilon Redon [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Odilon Redon [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Odilon Redon [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Sanders shows that the history of genre is enmeshed with political history as well as with the social and ritual roles that literary forms allow scribes to adopt.

Read More

March 19, 2018

Book Note | The Levites and the Boundaries of Israelite Identity

by Ethan Schwartz in Book Notes


9780190665098.jpeg
9780190665098.jpeg

Mark Leuchter’s The Levites and the Boundaries of Israelite Identity provides a compelling, innovative account of how the Hebrew Bible both reflects and encodes levitical concerns and power dynamics.

Read More

March 12, 2018

Book Note | Our Divine Double

by Nathan Tilley in Book Notes


Unknown-1.jpeg
Unknown-1.jpeg

Stang’s argument successfully and elegantly traces the motif of the divine double throughout these 2nd and 3rd century texts. He offers mostly close readings of these texts in ways that echo ancient Aristarchean criticism and “New Criticism,” and, as one can see in the introduction and the philosophical conclusion, he sees these texts in light of perennial questions of selfhood.

Read More

March 5, 2018

Book Note | From Sasanian Mandaeans to Ṣābians of the Marshes

by Jae H. Han in Book Notes


d300xvar.jpeg
d300xvar.jpeg

Van Bladel’s book is thus not only a story of the Mandaean past, but a window into Sasanian Mesopotamia and the forging of “religious communities” beyond the “Greco-Roman” boundaries.

Read More

February 26, 2018

Book Note | Incorruptible Bodies: Christology, Society, and Authority in Late Antiquity

by Thomas McGlothlin in Book Notes


Unknown-2.jpeg
Unknown-2.jpeg

The subject of Moss’s monograph, a revision of his Yale dissertation, is Severus’s theological, political, liturgical, and cultural contestations with fellow anti-Chalcedonians inclined to give up on the imperial church.

Read More

February 18, 2018

Book Note | Are We Not Men? Unstable Masculinity in the Hebrew Prophets

by Sarah Fein in Book Notes


9780190227364.jpeg
9780190227364.jpeg

Her innovation is bringing the male prophetic body, not just prophetic words, under consideration.

Read More

  • Newer
  • Older
Index
Publications RSS
Contact
Name *
Thank you!

© 2025 Ancient Jew Review.