UM Frankel Center Event – Magic and its Malcontents: Historiography as Heresiology

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Shaily Shashikant Patel, Virginia Tech “Strange things circulate below our streets,” Michel de Certeau writes. For him, coherent historiographies elide incoherent realities and give the illusion of a past which can be tidily reconstructed. The study of “magic” in early Christian literature illustrates how such scholarly preference for coherence occludes ancient ambiguities. Prevailing methodologies emphasize […]

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UM Frankel Center Event – “I Know Who Caused COVID-19″: Pandemics and Xenophobia

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  Sander Gilman, Emory University Zhou Xun, University of Essex with Alaa Murad, Brandeis University One of the most evident manifestation of the present pandemic has been the blaming of traditional (and non-traditional) out-groups for causing or spreading the virus. The Chinese, Muslims, Ultra-Orthodox Jews, American White Nationalists among other groups have been blamed. Central […]

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“Was Paul an Apocalyptic Jew? A Case in Jewish Diversity in the Second Temple Period”

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Conference Chairs: Gabriele Boccaccini; Lisa Bowens; Emma Wasserman; Loren Stuckenbruck Secretary: Joshua Scott Paul of Tarsus was born, lived and died a Jew. Raised as a Pharisee, he then joined the early Jesus movement, a first-century Jewish apocalyptic and messianic group. Paul became one of the most vocal leaders of the new movement and promoted […]