Difference between revisions of "Jason M. Zurawski"

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'''Jason M. Zurawski''' is an American scholar, completing his dissertation and lecturing at the University of Michigan.  
'''Jason M. Zurawski''' is an American scholar, at the University of Groningen (Netherlands).


==Biography==
==Biography==
Ph.D. candidate in Second Temple Judaism at the University of Michigan (expected completion, April 2015). Dissertation title: "Second Temple Jewish Paideia within its Hellenistic Contexts." Secretary of the [[Enoch Seminar]].


==Works on Second Temple Judaism==
Jason Zurawski earned his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI USA) in 2016. His dissertation, "Jewish Paideia in the Hellenistic Diaspora: Discussing Education, Shaping Identity," was directed by Prof. [[Gabriele Boccaccini]]. In Fall 2016, he began a postdoctoral fellowship at the Qumran Institute at the University of Groningen with Prof. [[Mladen Popovic]].
 
Since 2009 he has been the Secretary of the [[Enoch Seminar]] and since 2012 a member of the board of directors. He chaired the [[Fifth Nangeroni Meeting]] in Naples and will chair the [[Ninth Enoch Seminar]] in Camaldoli (18-23 June 2017). He is also on the Steering Committee of the Socity of Biblical Literature program unit, Wisdom and Apocalypticism.
 
==Works==


====Edited Volumes====
====Edited Volumes====
Line 15: Line 18:


*[[Interpreting 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch: International Studies (2014 Boccaccini, Zurawski), edited volume]]
*[[Interpreting 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch: International Studies (2014 Boccaccini, Zurawski), edited volume]]
*[[The Seleucid and Hasmonean Periods and the Apocalyptic Worldwiew (2016 Grabbe, Boccaccini, Zurawski), edited volume]]


====Articles====
====Articles====


*“Separating the Devil from the Diabolos: A Fresh Reading of Wisdom of Solomon 2:24,” [[Journal  
*“Separating the Devil from the Diabolos: A Fresh Reading of Wisdom of Solomon 2:24,” [[Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha]] 21.4 (2012): 366-399.
for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha]] 21.4 (2012): 366-399.


*“Hell on Earth: Corporeal Existence as the Ultimate Punishment of the Wicked in Philo of  
*“Hell on Earth: Corporeal Existence as the Ultimate Punishment of the Wicked in Philo of Alexandria and the Wisdom of Solomon,” in [[Heaven, Hell, and the Afterlife: Eternity in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam (2013 Ellens), edited volume]].
Alexandria and the Wisdom of Solomon,” in Heaven, Hell, and the Afterlife: Eternity in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam (ed. J. Harold Ellens; Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger, 2013), 1:193-226.


*“The Two Worlds and Adam’s Sin: The Problem of 4 Ezra 7:10-14,” in [[Interpreting 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch: International Studies (2014 Boccaccini, Zurawski), edited volume]].
*“The Two Worlds and Adam’s Sin: The Problem of 4 Ezra 7:10-14,” in [[Interpreting 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch: International Studies (2014 Boccaccini, Zurawski), edited volume]].


*“Ezra Begins: 4 Ezra as Prequel and the Making of a Superhero,” in Old Testament Pseudepigrapha  
*“Ezra Begins: 4 Ezra as Prequel and the Making of a Superhero,” in [[Old Testament Pseudepigrapha and the Scriptures (2014 Tigchelaar), edited volume]].
and the Scriptures (ed. Eibert Tigchelaar; BETL; Leuven: Peeters, 2014 forthcoming).
 
*“From Musar to Paideia, From Torah to Nomos: How the Translation of the Septuagint Impacted the Paideutic Ideal in Hellenistic Judaism,” in Proceedings of the Fifteenth Congress of the International Organization of Septuagint and Cognate Studies (ed. Wolfgang Kraus, Martin Meiser, and Michaël N. van der Meer; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).
 
*“Paideia: A Multifarious and Unifying Concept in the Wisdom of Solomon,” in From Musar to Paideia: Education in Early Judaism and Christianity (ed. Matthew Goff and Karina Martin Hogan; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).
 
*“Mosaic Torah as Encyclical Paideia: Reading Paul’s Allegory of Hagar and Sarah in Light of Philo of Alexandria’s,” in From Musar to Paideia: Education in Early Judaism and Christianity (ed. Matthew Goff and Karina Martin Hogan; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).


==External links==
==External links==


*[https://umich.academia.edu/JasonZurawski Academia.edu]
*[https://rug.academia.edu/JasonZurawski Academia.edu]






[[Category:Scholars|Zurawski]]
[[Category:Z-Zu|Zurawski]]


[[Category:American|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:American|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:American Scholars|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:American Scholars|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:Born in the 1970s|Zurawski]]


[[Category:University of Michigan|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:University of Michigan|>Zurawski]]
[[Category:University of Groningen|>Zurawski]]

Latest revision as of 06:02, 4 January 2020

Jason M. Zurawski is an American scholar, at the University of Groningen (Netherlands).

Biography

Jason Zurawski earned his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, MI USA) in 2016. His dissertation, "Jewish Paideia in the Hellenistic Diaspora: Discussing Education, Shaping Identity," was directed by Prof. Gabriele Boccaccini. In Fall 2016, he began a postdoctoral fellowship at the Qumran Institute at the University of Groningen with Prof. Mladen Popovic.

Since 2009 he has been the Secretary of the Enoch Seminar and since 2012 a member of the board of directors. He chaired the Fifth Nangeroni Meeting in Naples and will chair the Ninth Enoch Seminar in Camaldoli (18-23 June 2017). He is also on the Steering Committee of the Socity of Biblical Literature program unit, Wisdom and Apocalypticism.

Works

Edited Volumes

Articles

  • “From Musar to Paideia, From Torah to Nomos: How the Translation of the Septuagint Impacted the Paideutic Ideal in Hellenistic Judaism,” in Proceedings of the Fifteenth Congress of the International Organization of Septuagint and Cognate Studies (ed. Wolfgang Kraus, Martin Meiser, and Michaël N. van der Meer; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).
  • “Paideia: A Multifarious and Unifying Concept in the Wisdom of Solomon,” in From Musar to Paideia: Education in Early Judaism and Christianity (ed. Matthew Goff and Karina Martin Hogan; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).
  • “Mosaic Torah as Encyclical Paideia: Reading Paul’s Allegory of Hagar and Sarah in Light of Philo of Alexandria’s,” in From Musar to Paideia: Education in Early Judaism and Christianity (ed. Matthew Goff and Karina Martin Hogan; Atlanta: SBL, forthcoming).

External links