Pages

Thursday, August 14, 2003

THE SOCIETY OF BIBLICAL LITERATURE has released its online program for the November annual meeting in Atlanta, as has been noted on a number of e-mail lists in the last day. The following are sessions devoted in particular to aspects of ancient Judaism:

S24-4 Aramaic Studies Section
S24-102 Aramaic Studies Section

S23-3 Archaeological Excavations and Discoveries: Illuminating the Biblical World Section

S24-53 Biblical Lands and Peoples in Archaeology and Text Section

S24-8 Chronicles-Ezra-Nehemiah Section

S25-7 Early Jewish and Christian Mysticism Group
S24-10 Early Jewish and Christian Mysticism Group

S24-108 Early Jewish Christian Relations Section
S24-56 Early Jewish Christian Relations Section
S25-8 Early Jewish Christian Relations Section

S25-9 Hellenistic Judaism Section
S23-9 Hellenistic Judaism Section

S24-112 History and Literature of Early Rabbinic Judaism Section
S23-109 History and Literature of Early Rabbinic Judaism Section
S25-10 History and Literature of Early Rabbinic Judaism Section

S23-13 Josephus Seminar
S24-116 Josephus Seminar

S24-117 Late Antiquity in Interdisciplinary Perspective Section
S23-113 Midrash Consultation Consultation

S25-14 Literature and History of the Persian Period Group

S23-18 Paleographical Studies in the Ancient Near East Section

S23-117 Philo of Alexandria Group
S24-19 Philo of Alexandria Group

S24-63 Pseudepigrapha Section
S24-20 Pseudepigrapha Section

S24-64 Q Section

S23-67 Qumran Section
S22-112 Qumran Section

S24-59 International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies Affiliate

S24-66 Social History of Formative Christianity and Judaism Section

S24-67 Social-scientific Studies of the Second Temple Period Section
S22-70 Social-scientific Studies of the Second Temple Period Section

S23-72 Wisdom and Apocalypticism in Early Judaism and Early Christianity Group

I tried to include the JavaScript pop-up links directly to each session, but I couldn't get them to work. My JavaScript skills are, well, nonexistent, so if a Java-literate reader can tell me how to fit them into the Blogger interface I can redo this post with links. Also, there are plenty of other relevant individual papers scattered through the other sessions, so skim the whole program. And perhaps I should mention that, at least for me, the search engine was not recognizing some obvious keywords it should have known, such as "Judaism."

No comments:

Post a Comment