We are thrilled to introduce this year’s CAMS lecture series. Lectures will be held in a hybrid format in the Weaver Building and online via Zoom. Stay tuned for more information, including Zoom links, for each lecture. For now, save the following dates and times!
In antiquity, texts could function as objects of power, sources of revealed knowledge, and vehicles for authorizing certain religious and social arrangements. Scribes—those responsible for producing, transmitting, and interpreting texts—could often achieve political, social, and religious status by virtue of their facility with the written word and their association with authoritative textual traditions. In this interdisciplinary lecture series, we are inviting experts representing a range of scholarly approaches to explore the relationship between textuality, authority, and power in religious traditions from the Mediterranean basin to Mesopotamia.
Monday, October 9, 11:15 a.m. (102 Weaver Building)
Simcha Gross (University of Pennsylvania)
“Rabbis, Scribes, and Sorcerers: Incantations, Script, and Authority in Late Antique Jewish Babylonia”
Friday, November 3, 4:00 p.m. (102 Weaver Building)
David Frankfurter (Boston University)
“Extracting the Magic of Writing: The Senses of the Written Word”
Friday, December 4, 4:00 p.m. (102 Weaver Building)
Eckart Frahm (Yale University)
“Between Propaganda, Polemics, and Philosophy: The Babylonian Epic of Creation Inside and Outside of Mesopotamia”
Friday, February 23, 12:15 p.m. (102 Weaver Building)
Heidi Wendt (McGill University)
“Wisdom Among the Mature? Pauline Letter Collections, Gospel Composition, and the Codex in the Culture of Roman Miscellany”
Monday, March 11, 5:30 p.m. (102 Weaver Building)
Sofía Torallas Tovar (University of Chicago)
“Scribes and Wizards: Materiality of Greco Egyptian Magical Handbooks”
Friday, April 19, 4:00 p.m. (102 Weaver Building)
Sarah Iles Johnston (Ohio State University)
Title: TBD