Difference between revisions of "2020 Enoch Seminar Online"
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2:30pm-4pm [Chair Lorenzo DiTommaso] -- 3. What was the nature and extent of Zoroastrian, Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Greco-Roman influences on the diverse notions of evil in Second Temple Judaism? | 2:30pm-4pm [Chair Lorenzo DiTommaso] -- 3. What was the nature and extent of Zoroastrian, Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Greco-Roman influences on the diverse notions of evil in Second Temple Judaism? | ||
* Panelists: TBA | * Panelists: Jason Silverman, TBA | ||
* Respondents: TBA | * Respondents: Vicente Dobroruka, TBA | ||
====Tuesday, June 30, 2020: Three sessions==== | ====Tuesday, June 30, 2020: Three sessions==== |
Revision as of 13:18, 15 May 2020
Title: Concepts of Evil in Second Temple Judaism and Christian Origins
Participation is by invitation only. It is not a public conference (in streaming), but a workshop among invited specialists.
Chairs: Gabriele Boccaccini and Lorenzo DiTommaso (with Kelley Coblentz Bautch, Loren Stuckenbruk and Jason Zurawski)
Date : June 29 - July 1-2 (Monday - Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday)
Daily schedule (Eastern American Time): 10am-11:30am / 12:00pm-1:30pm / 2:30pm-4pm
Registration: In order to virtually attend the meeting and the presentation of the Lifetime Achievement Awards, you must register via the online registration form here: https://forms.gle/2VfgpsT3EBYDjDt9A.
Description (by the Chairs)
Our Approach to this Online Seminar
Participants should keep in mind that the tenor of their presentations/responses ought to be prospective rather than retrospective. A survey of past work is not appropriate here, nor is the statement of an issue that has been “chewed over” for a long time. We seek, instead, new ideas, theses, or approaches. A statement of a major issue or question that has come to light in view of recent scholarship would be excellent, as well, especially if it is “thick,” in the sense that it contains ideas that could be unpacked and debated in group discussion for mutual profit.
Time Allotted for Each Presentation and Response
Each presentation is only 10-15 minutes and each response is 5 minutes in length. Unlike in-person Enoch Seminars, we do not require participants to pre-circulate their papers. Thus, the emphasis is on brevity, clarity, and, to a certain degree, generality, at least within the session parameters. Accordingly, participants should expect that they will be given ample time to revise/amplify their ideas for publication in the conference volume, ideally in dialogue with the formal responses (which, as discussed, will also be published) and informal group discussion.
The Nature of the Seminar
For this Online Seminar, questions posed are intended to be quite open-ended. On the one hand, this allows panelists and respondents maximum room for exploration within the compass of the session topic. On the other hand, we are issuing invitations to targeted specialists in the expectation they require the least in the way of guidance and have the most likelihood of sizing up the question and offering meaningful responses to it. For this reason, participation is by invitation only. It is not a public conference (in streaming), but a workshop among invited specialists.
A New Kind of Conference for this Distinctive Moment
This will be a new kind of conference experience for most of us. We've tweaked a few things in order to accommodate the new medium, according us maximum fluidity in the conference architecture without sacrificing traditional scientific rigour. We are excited that the Enoch Seminar is taking this initiative in light of the current moment and given the likelihood that online platforms will continue to be important and omnipresent in various academic contexts. The Seminar means to carry on despite these difficult times, not only to maintain continuity and connexions, but also because the Republic of Letters, of which we are citizens, may bend with stormy winds but will not break.
Schedule
Monday, June 29, 2020: Opening Session
12:00pm- 1:30pm -- Welcome and Opening Remarks. "Awards Ceremony"
- "Enoch Seminar Life Achievement Award" to honor Paolo Sacchi, George Nickelsburg, Robert Kraft, Michael Knibb, Michael Stone, Devorah Dimant, and James Charlesworth, "in gratitude for their exceptional contribution to the field of Second Temple Jewish Studies and their generous service in the Enoch Seminar."
- Presenters: Gabriele Boccaccini, Kelley Coblentz Bautch, Annette Reed, John Collins, Jonathan Ben-Dov, Lorenzo DiTommaso, Loren Stuckenbruck
2:30pm-4pm [Chair Lorenzo DiTommaso] -- 3. What was the nature and extent of Zoroastrian, Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Greco-Roman influences on the diverse notions of evil in Second Temple Judaism?
- Panelists: Jason Silverman, TBA
- Respondents: Vicente Dobroruka, TBA
Tuesday, June 30, 2020: Three sessions
10am-11:30am [Chair Kelley Bautch] -- 2. Which are the different ways in which evil was understood to enter into the world? Which historical or social circumstances prompted the preference from one or the other? Was it a case of a religious development in response to fundamental changes in the religious environment? In both cases, where and why?
- Panelists: Carol Newsome, Loren Stuckenbruck, James VanderKam
- Respondents: Matthias Henze, Lester Grabbe, Anathea Portier-Young
12:00pm-1:30pm [Chair Jason Zurawski] -- 4. How do non-apocalyptic texts of the period engage with the issue of the origin of evil and the theological problems it raises? Is there literary evidence, explicit or implicit, for contemporary debate regarding the existence of multiple explanations for the origin of evil in the world, particularly regarding the ways that each explanation addresses theological and existential issues?
- Panelists: Gerbern Oegema, Karina Martin Hogan, Greg Sterling
- Respondents: Hindy Najman, Ben Wright
2:30pm-4pm [Chair Lorenzo DiTommaso] -- 5. Are evil human or superhuman figures a necessary and functional part of the earliest expressions of evil, or did they develop later?
- Panelists: Kelley Coblentz Bautch, Ryan Stokes, Archie Wright
- Respondents: Michael Morris, Lorenzo DiTommaso
Wednesday, July 1, 2020 -- Three sessions
10am-11:30am [Chair Loren Stuckenbruck] -- 6. The origin of evil in the Dead Sea Scrolls.
- Panelists: John Collins, Jutta Leonhardt-Balzer, Miryam Brand
- Respondents: Timothy Lim, Elisa Uusimäki, Benjamin Wold
12:00pm-1:30pm [Chair Gabriele Boccaccini] -- 7. How is the problem of evil and its origin addressed in the Parables of Enoch and the Synoptics?
- Panelists: Leslie Baynes, Gabriele Boccaccini, Daniel Boyarin
- Respondents: Jim Davila, Eric Noffke, Benjamin Reynolds
2:30pm-4pm [Chair Ben Reynolds] -- 8. Do Paul and John stand in line with trajectories already evident in the Synoptics and Jewish apocalyptic literature of the era, or do they represent a new direction? Do we have evidence of divergent notions on the origin of evil in the early Jesus movement?
- Panelists: Paula Fredriksen, Adele Reinhartz, Edmondo Lupieri
- Respondents: Matthew Theissen, Jutta Leonhart-Balzer, Craig Koester
Thursday, July 2, 2020 -- Three sessions & Conclusion
10am-11:30am [Chair Jason Zurawski] -- 9. How is the problem of evil and its origin addressed in Rabbinic literature? Does it/they stand in line with trajectories already evident in the Jewish literature of the Second Temple Period, or does it represent a wholly new explanation?
- Panelists: Hector Patmore, Steven Fraade, Paul Mandel
- Respondents: Ishay Rosen-Zvi, Ronit Nikolsky, Mika Ahuvia
12:00pm-1:30pm [Chair Kelley Bautch] -- 10. How is the problem of evil and its origin addressed in "gnostic" (Valentinian, Sethian, Mandaean) literature? Do they stand in line with trajectories already evident in the Second Temple Period, or represent a wholly new explanation?
- Panelists: Jason BeDuhn, Alberto Camplani, James McGrath
- Respondents: April DeConick, Nicola Denzey-Lewis, Dylan Burns
2:30pm-4pm [Chair Loren Stuckenbruck] -- 1. If "apocalyptic is the mother of theology," is the problem of evil the mother of "apocalyptic"?
- Panelists: Ida Fröhlich, Albert Baumgarten, Emmanouela Grypeou
- Respondents: Matthew Goff, Matthias Hoffmann, Alexander Kulik
- 4-5pm - Wrap up session. Final comments.
Confirmed Participants
- Mika Ahuvia (University of Washington, USA)
- #@ Paul Anderson (George Fox University, USA)*
- Joseph Angel (Yeshiva University)*
- Luca Arcari (University of Naples, Italy)
- # Kenneth Atkinson (University of Northern Iowa, USA)
- #@ Harold W. Attridge (Yale University, USA)*
- # Florentina Badalova Geller (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
- #@ Albert I. Baumgarten (Bar-Ilan University, Israel)*
- Giovanni Bazzana (Harvard University, USA)
- @ Gabriele Boccaccini (University of Michigan, USA)*
- # Darrell Bock (Dallas Theological Seminary, USA)
- Miryam T. Brand (W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research, Israel)
- Tom de Bruin (Newbold College, UK)*
- # Piero Capelli (University of Venice, Italy)*
- Alberto Camplani (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)
- Rodney Caruthers (Ashland Theological Seminary, USA)
- Kelley Coblentz Bautch (St Edward's University, USA)*
- # John J. Collins (Yale University, USA)
- # Sidnie White Crawford (University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA)
- April DeConick (Rice University, USA)
- Lorenzo DiTommaso (Concordia University Montreal, Canada)*
- # Jan Dochhorn (Durham University, England)
- Rachel Dryden (PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge, England)
- Oliver Dyma (WWU Münster, Germany)*
- # Torleif Elgvin (NLA University College, Norway)
- Jason von Ehrenkrook (University of Massachusetts at Boston, USA)
- @ Deborah Forger (Dartmouth College, USA)
- # Steven Fraade (Yale University, USA)
- Ida Froelich (Catholic University Budapest, Hungary)
- # Angela Kim Harkins (Boston College, USA)
- Charlotte Hempel (University of Birmingham, UK)*
- #@ Matthias Henze (Rice University, USA)*
- Karina Martin Hogan (Fordham University, USA)*
- Giovanni Ibba (Istituto Superiore di Scienze Religiose S. Caterina da Siena, Italy)*
- David R. Jackson (Australia)*
- Jonathan Kaplan (The University of Texas at Austin, USA)*
- Paul Kim (Methodist Theological School in Ohio, USA)*
- Karen King (Harvard University, USA)*
- Michael Knibb (King's College London, UK)*
- Robert Kraft (University of Pennsylvania, USA)*
- Alexander Kulik (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
- David Lambert (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)*
- # Mark Leuchter (Temple University, USA)
- # John R. (Jack) Levison (Southern Methodist University, USA)
- # Liv Ingeborg Lied (Norwegian School of Theology, Norway)*
- # Timothy Lim (University of Edinburgh, Scotland)
- Paul Mandel (Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, Israel)
- Luca Mazzinghi (Pontificia Università Gregoriana, Italy)*
- Gavin McDowell (Université Laval, Canada)*
- James McGrath (Butler University, USA)*
- Daniele Minisini (Sapienza - University of Rome, Italy)*
- Ronit Nikolsky (University of Groningen, Netherlands)*
- Eric Noffke (Waldensian School of Theology, Italy)
- @ Gerbern Oegema (McGill University, Canada)*
- Isaac Oliver (Bradley University, USA)
- #@ Andrei Orlov (Marquette University, USA)
- Tali Partock (University of Cambridge, UK)*
- Hector Patmore (KU Leuven, Belgium)
- Chad Pierce
- # Annette Reed (New York University, USA)*
- Adele Reinhartz (University of Ottawa, Canada)*
- Benjamin Reynolds (Tyndale University, Canada)
- Ishay Rosen-Zvi (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
- Joshua Scott (PhD Candidate, University of Michigan, USA)*
- Shayna Sheinfeld (Sheffield Institute for Interdisciplinary Biblical Studies, USA)*
- Ryan Stokes
- # Michael Stone (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
- Loren Stuckenbruck (University of Munich, Germany)*
- David Suter (USA)
- # Joan Taylor (King's College London, England)
- Catrin Williams (University of Wales Trinity Saint David, UK)*
- # Benjamin Wold (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland)
- Archie Wright (Regent University, USA)*
- Ben Wright (Lehigh University, USA)
- Jason Zurawski (University of Groningen, Netherlands)