Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature

Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, New Orleans, 2009
22-228
Rivka Ulmer, Bucknell University, Presiding
Eszter K. Fuzessy, University of Chicago
The Function of the “Outsider” in Rabbinic Literature: The Limits of Rabbinic Interpretation (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Rachel Adelman, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
“Such Stuff as Dreams are made on”: God’s Footstool in the Aramaic Targumim and Midrashic Tradition (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Yonatan Sagiv, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Between Leviticus 1 and 6: Taxonomy of Ancient Hermeneutics (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Break (10 min)
Jason Mokhtarian, University of California-Los Angeles
Midrashic Depictions of Persia (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
24-119
Theme: Memory and Midrash
William B. Nelson, Presiding
Jonathan Kaplan, Harvard University
Allegorical or Typological?: Remembering Israel’s History in Tannaitic Interpretation of the Song of Songs (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Morton Merowitz, University of New York at Buffalo (Retired)
Nahman Krochmal's reinterpretion of the Jewish past (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Break (15 min)
Business Meeting (35 min)
Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, Boston, 2008
SBL 23-33
11/23/2008
9:00 Am to 11:30 AM
Lieve Teugels & Rivka Ulmer, Presiding
Isaac Kalimi, Albright Institute, Jerusalem: "The Aqeda in Rabbinic Literature"
Jesse Rainbow, Harvard University: Sarah Saw a Hunter: "The Venatic Motif in Genesis Rabbah 53:11"
Eszter K. Fuzessay: "The Fictionalization of the Text (as if-- "ke-illu") as a Hermeneutic Method of Rabbinic Interpretation"
Ishay Rosen, Tel Aviv University: "Hyper-Sexualization of Reality in the Bavli"
Erica Martin, Graduate Theological Union: "The Rabbinic Knife: Why and How the Rabbis Castrated Noah"
SBL24-128
11/24/2008
Joint Session with Bible and Visual Art
Rivka Ulmer, Presiding
Steven Fine, Yeshiva University: "Bezalel Son of Uri: A Biblical Artisan with a Rabbinic 'Union Card'"
Victoria Hoffer, Yale University: "Visions of Abraham: Pictoral Representations of the Aqedah from Mosaics to Moderns"
Bogdan G. Bucur, Duquesne University, and Elijah Mueller, Marquette University: "Biblical Interpretation in Byzantine Iconography and Hymnography."
Society of Biblical Literature Annual Meeting, San Diego, 2007
S18-123 Midrash 11/18/2007
4:00 PM to 6:30 PM Room: Del Mar B - GH
W. David Nelson, Brite Divinity School, Texas Christian University, Presiding
Rivka Ulmer, Bucknell University, Presiding
Nehemia Polen, Hebrew College
Derashah as Performative Exegesis in Tosefta and Mishna (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Alex P. Jassen, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
The Origins of the Flood in Second Temple and Rabbinic Interpretation (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Break (10 min)
Eszter K. Fuzessy, University of Chicago
"Dialogues between Sages and Outsiders to the Tradition": Creation of Difference as a Literary Method of Religious Polemics in Rabbinic Literature (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
John T. Townsend, Harvard University
The Demise of the School of Shammai (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
S20-12 Midrash 11/20/2007
9:00 AM to 11:30 AM Room: Annie B - GH
Theme: Modes of Interpretation in Syriac, Rabbinic and Islamic traditions Chairs: Rivka Ulmer, Bucknell University, and Lieve Teugels, Gorgias Press
Robert R. Phenix, Jr., Saint Louis University
The Sermons on Joseph of Balai of Qennešrin (Early Fifth Century CE) as a Witness to the Transmission History and Interpretive Development of Joseph Traditions (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Michael Pregill, New York, NY
The Ox, the Chariot, and the Glory: Islamic and Jewish Traditions on the Golden Calf (25 min)
Discussion (10 min) Break (10 min)
Steven D. Sacks, Cornell College
The Shadow of Abraham’s Camel: An Examination of Shared Traditions in Late Midrash and Early Islam (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Willem Smelik, University College London
The Notion of the Holy Tongue in Early Rabbinic Literature (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
The purpose of the Consultation is to provide a forum
at the SBL Annual Meeting to explore midrash. This consultation proposes a comprehensive
study and analysis of midrashic literature and phenomena. Cross-disciplinary
participation is encouraged. The consultation on Midrash will continue as a Session (2006 - 2011).
Washington, DC 2006
http://www.sbl-site.org
Midrash Session 1
Time TBD
Date TBD
Room TBD
Theme: Religion in Midrash
Rivka Kern-Ulmer, Bucknell University, Presiding (5 min)
Holger Zellentin, Princeton University
The Bavli's View of Palestinian Dream Interpretation (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Jaroslav Eliah Sykora, South Bohemian University
The Messias and Eschatology in EccR (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Anne Davis, Trinity Southwest University
Divorce and the New Testament: Midrash in Matthew 19:3-12 (25 min)
Marc Bregman, Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion, Respondent (10 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Break (5 min)
Business Meeting (25 min)
Midrash Session 2
Time TBD
Date TBD
Room TBD
Theme: Religion in Midrash
Rivka Kern-Ulmer, Bucknell University, Presiding (5 min)
Steven Sacks, Cornell College
The Foundation Stone: Reflections on the Adoption and Transformation of Primordial Myth in Rabbinic Literature (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Willem Smelik, University College London
Adam in Eden and Sanhedrin (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Dr. Isaac Gottlieb, Bar Ilan University
The Extremes of Esther: Midrash on the Megillah (25 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Mary Bader, College of Wooster
Dinah in the Midrash (25 min)
Lieve Teugels, Respondent (10 min)
Discussion (5 min)
Philadelphia 2005
S21-117
Theme: Midrash and Cultural Studies.
After this year's session we will continue as a section.
Lieve Teugels, Gorgias Press, Presiding
Jaroslav Eliah Sykora, South Bohemian University
The Authority of Abraham in Qohelet Rabbah (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Holger M. Zellentin, Princeton University
Rabbinic Play with Ethics, Words and Worlds (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
W. David Nelson, Brite Divinity School, Texas Christian University
Mnemonic Method in Halakhic and Aggadic Midrash (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Deborah A. Green, University of Oregon
Evidence of Spices in Jewish Burials (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Rivka Ulmer, Bucknell University
Methodological Considerations in Respect to Egyptian Cultural Icons in Midrash (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Midrash and Cultural Studies. This session will be dedicated to questions and methodologies touching upon areas of rabbinic culture and its sociological realities as well as the interpretation of archeological findings in their relationship to midrashic texts. Furthermore, papers may address topics such as Christian and pagan festivals, rituals, and customs as well as the language of the midrashic texts. We envision contributions relating to, but not limited to, the Greco-Roman, Babylonian, Islamic, and Byzantine culture.
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Publication: "Recent Developments in Midrash Research."
Teugels, L. & Ulmer, R. (eds.). Recent Developments in Midrash Research. Proceedings of the 2002 and 2003 SBL Consultation on Midrash.
(Gorgias Press, 2005) Series: Judaism in Context 2 ISBN: 1-59333-201-7
San Antonio 2004
“Jewish and Christian hermeneutics.” Scriptural exegesis was critical to the formation of Judaism and Christianity. In Judaism, the hermeneutic tradition that began with Biblical interpretation (if not even earlier, with inner-Biblical exegesis) developed its distinctive hermeneutics in midrash. Comparable developments took place in early Christianity. What is the relationship between specific types and strategies of hermeneutics and the religious traditions of which they are a part? Can Christian texts be read as midrash?
Theme: Jewish and Christian Hermeneutics
Annette Yoshiko Reed, McMaster University
Sons of God, Giants, and the Generation of the Flood: Genesis 6:1–4 and the Methods of Rabbinic and Patristic Exegesis (20 min)
Matthew Kraus, Williams College
The Late Antique Context of Jewish Exegetical Traditions in Jerome's Targum of the Bible (20 min)
Jason Kalman, McGill University
Repeating
His Grandfather’s Heresy: The Significance of Esau and Job’s Denial of
the Resurrection of the Dead in Rabbinic Anti-Christian Polemic (20 min)
Discussion (10 min)
Break (5 min)
Elke Toenges, Ruhr University of Bochum
The Letter to the Hebrews: Between Jewish and Christian Hermeneutics (20 min)
Joshua L. Moss, American Hebrew Academy
Being the Temple: Early Jewish and Christian Interpretive Transpositions (20 min)
Herbert Basser, Queen's University
The Value of the Gospels for Reading Rabbis (20 min)
Discussion (15 min)
Atlanta 2003
"Where do we stand in midrashic text editions and translations?” There is an enormous interest in rabbinic midrashic texts that, after all, are the foundation of any discussion about midrash. Many major and minor midrashic works as well as hitherto unknown midrashic texts were hidden in manuscript collections. At the same time numerous midrashim are translated into English. In fact, midrashic works are often first edited in an English translation. The session is open to paper proposals."
2003 SBL Annual Meeting
Atlanta, Georgia
22-25 November 2003
Midrash Consultation
Session Theme or Title: Midrashic Text Editions and Translations -- Theory and Practice
Session Type: Papers with responses
Participants: (in appearance order)
1. Rivka B. Kern Ulmer, Bucknell University - Presider
2. Dennis C Stoutenburg, Wilfrid Laurier University - Presentation Title: Where Do We Stand in Midrash Rabbah Text Editions and Translations?
3. W. David Nelson, Brite Divinity School - TCU- Presentation Title: Translating the Mekhilta of Rabbi Shimon b. Yohai: Challenges and Considerations
4. Vered Noam, Tel Aviv University - Presentation Title: From Philology to history and literature: The case of Megillat Taanit
5. Break (10 min)
6. Burton L Visotzky, Jewish Theological Seminary - Presentation Title: Critical Editions of Rabbinic Literature
7. Rivka B. Kern-Ulmer, Bucknell University- Presentation Title: Creating Rabbinic Texts: Moving from a Synoptic to a Critical Edition of Pesiqta Rabbati
Toronto 2002
Monday, November 25th
===================================
S25-22
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Special
9:00 AM - 11:30 AM
Theme: Midrash
Rivka B Kern-Ulmer, University Of Pennsylvania, Presiding
Marc Bregman, Hebrew Union College
Midrash
Lieve M Teugels, Univ Of Utrecht, Panelist
Yaakov Elman, Yeshiva University, Panelist
W F Smelik, University College London, Panelist
John T Townsend, Harvard Divinity School, Panelist
Discussion.
Abstracts of the papers and responses:
Steering Committee Members
Co-chair: Professor Rivka B. Kern Ulmer,
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Chair in Judaic Studies, Bucknell University,
Lewisburg, PA,
received her Dr. phil. in Judaic Studies from Goethe Universität in Frankfurt
am Main (Germany) in 1985 with a dissertation in midrash. She holds M.A. degrees
in Linguistics, American Studies and Judaic Studies; undergraduate studies at
Ben-Gurion University, Israel; postdoctoral at Hebrew Union College. Some of
her appointments included: Brown University, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute
of Religion, Harvard University, Jüdische Hochschule Heidelberg, University
of Copenhagen. She organized sessions in rabbinics, Regional SBL/New England;
she was Director of the Jüdisches Lehrhaus in Frankfurt. She has authored/edited
nine books and published fifty articles. A Synoptic Edition Of Pesiqta Rabbati
Based Upon All Extant Hebrew Manuscripts And The Editio Princeps is a three
volume edition of a midrashic work. Selected publications: Turmoil, Trauma and
Triumph. The Text of Megillas Vintz. New York & Frankfurt: P. Lang, 2001;
“Further Manuscript Evidence of Pesiqta Rabbati: A Description of MS JTS
8195 (and MS Moscow 214)” Journal of Jewish Studies 52 (2001) 269-307;
“The Mishnah in the Later Midrashim.” In: Contemporary Study of
the Mishnah. (Leiden: Brill, 2002); and others in Proceedings of the World Congress
of Jewish Studies, Zeitschrift für Religions- und Geistesgeschichte, Encylopaedia
of Judaism, Journal for the Study of Judaism, Encyclopaedia of Midrash, Approaches
to Ancient Judaism, Henoch, Judaism, Encyclopédie Philosophique, Theologische
Realenzyclopädie, Linguistica Biblica, Juden in Kassel, Annual of Rabbinic
Judaism, Kairos, Plesse-Archiv, Diskussionsbeiträge aus dem Jüdischen
Lehrhaus, Frankfurter Judaistische Beiträge, Bulletin of the Oriental Institute
in Cairo, Judaica .
Co-chair: Lieve Teugels,
Ph.D., Acquisition and Production Editor at Gorgias Press, received
her PhD from the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium) in 1994. She holds
a BA in Semitic Languages from the same university. She served as Associate
Professor of Jewish Studies at the Faculty of T heology of the University of
Utrecht in the Netherlands (since 1994). Since Sept. 2000 she has been Visiting
Professor at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City, where she has
been teaching several classes in midrash, and the Introduction to Rabbinic Literature.
She is section leader of the Jewish Studies section of the European Association
of Biblical Literature; and of the Ancient Judaism Section at the Conference
of the European Association for Jewish Studies in Amsterdam, July 2002. She
has published an annotated translation of a late rabbinic Midrash: Aggadat Bereshit.
Translated from the Hebrew with an Introduction and Notes (Jewish and Christian
Perspectives, 4), Brill, Leiden 2001. Her articles in the field of midrash and
rabbinics include: “Concern for the Unity of Tenakh in the Formation of
Aggadat Bereshit”, in L.V. Rutgers, H.W. Havelaar, P.W. van der Horst
& L. Teugels (eds.), The Use of Sacred Books in the Ancient World, Peeters,
Leuven (1998) 187-202; “The Background of the Anti-Christian Polemics
in Aggadat Bereshit”, Journal for the Study of Judaism 30 (1999) 178-208;
“New Perspectives on the Origins of Aggadat Bereshit. The Witness of a
Geniza Fragment”, in Jewish Studies at the Turn of the 20th Century. Proceedings
of the 6th EAJS Congress, Toledo 1998, Ed. by J. Targarona Borras and A. Saenz-Badillos,
Leiden-Boston-Köln: Brill, 1999. Vol. I Biblical, Rabbinical and Medieval
Studies, 349-357; “Aggadat Bereshit and the Triennial Lectionary Cycle”,
Journal of Jewish Studies 51/1 (2000) 117-132; “Two Centuries of Midrash
Study: A Survey of Some Standard Works on Rabbinic Midrash and its Methods”,
Nederlands Theologisch Tijdschrift 54 (2000) 125-144; “Textual Criticism
in Late Rabbinic Midrashim: The Example of Aggadat Bereshit” in Wim Weren/
Diet-rich-Alex Koch (eds.), Recent Developments in Textual Criticism: New Testament,
Early-Jewish and Early-Christian Writings (Studies in Theology and Religion)
van Go rcum, Assen 2002.
Professor Yaakov Elman,
Yeshiva University, received his PhD from New York University
in 1986; he is Professor at Yeshiva University, New York. He has published widely
in all fields of rabbinic studies and Dead Sea Scrolls. His publications include:
Authority and Tradition: Toseftan Baraitot in Talmudic Babylonia, Yeshiva University
Press, NY, 1994; "Babylonian Echoes in a Late Rabbinic Legend," Journal
of the Ancient Near East Society 4 (1972), 13-19;"The Order of Arguments
in Kalekh baraitot in Relation to the Conclusion," Jewish Quarterly Review
79/4 (April, 1989), 295-304; "When Permission is Given: Aspects of Divine
Providence," Tradition 24/4 (Summer, 1989), 24-45;"The Suffering of
the Righteous in Babylonian and Palestinian Sources," Jewish Quarterly
Review 80 (1990), 315-39; "Righteousness as Its Own Reward: An Inquiry
into the Theologies of the Stam," Proceedings of the American Academy for
Jewish Research 57 (1991), 35-67;"Progressive Derash and Retrospective
Peshat: Non-Halakhic Considerations in Talmud Torah," in S. Carmy, ed.,
Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah: Contributions and Limitations, Northvale,
NJ, 1996, 189-287;"'It Is No Empty Thing': Nahmanides and the Search for
Omnisignificance," The Torah U-Madda Journal 4 (1993), 1-83; "Le-Toledot
ha-Ribbuy ba-Talmud ha-Bavli," Proceedings of the Eleventh World Congress
of Jewish Studies, Jerusalem, 1994, 87-94; "The Contribution of Rabbinic
Thought Towards a Theology of Suffering," in S. Car-my, ed., Jewish Perspectives
on the Experience of Suffering, Jason Aaronson, Inc., 1999, 155-212;"Rava
veha-Heqer ha-Artziyisraeli be-Midrash Halakhah," in I. Gafni and L. H.
Schiffman, eds., Ba-Golah u-Vatefutzot, Jerusalem, 1999; "Order, Sequence,
and Selection: The Mishnah's Anthological Choices," in D. Stern, The Anthological
Imagination (Oxford UP) (forth-coming);"Classic Rabbinic Interpretation,"
Jewish Study Bible (Oxford UP).
Professor Willem Smelik, University College London, received his PhD from Theologische Universiteit Kampen (Netherlands) in 1995. He is editor of Aramaic studies, Vice-President of the International Organization for Targum Studies, previous Chief Editor of the Bilingual Concordance of the Targum to the Prophets. Dr. Smelik is lecturer in Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic at University College London, Department of Hebrew & Jewish Studies. His publications include: The Targum of Judges (OTS. 36; Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1995); Judges (A Bilingual Concordance to the Targum of the Proph-ets, 2; Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1996;“On Mystical Transformation of the Righteous into Light in Judaism”. Journal for the Study of Judaism 26 (1995), 122-44; “Translation and Commentary in One: The Interplay of Pluses and Substitutions in the Targum of the Prophets”, Journal for the Study of Judaism 29 (1998), 245-260; “Concordance and Consistency: Translation Studies and Targum Jonathan”, Journal of Jewish Studies 49 (1998), 286-305; “The Use of hizkir beshem in Classical Hebrew: Josh 23:7, Isa 48:1, Amos 6:10, Ps. 20:8, 4Q504 iii 4, 1QS 6.27”, Journal of Biblical Literature117 (1998), 321-32 and 118 (1999), 321-332; “The Rabbinic Reception of Early Bible Translations as Holy Writings and Oral Torah”, Journal for the Aramaic Bible 1 (1999), 249-72; “Twin Targums: Psalm 18 and 2 Samuel 22, in A. Rapaport-Albert and G. Greenberg (eds.), Biblical Hebrew, Biblical Texts: Essays in Memory of Michael P. Weitzman (JSOT.S, 333; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2001), 244-81; written together with Marian Smelik; “Language, Locus and Translation Between the Talmudim” Journal for the Aramaic Bible 3 (2001). `Orality, the Targums, and Manuscript Reproduction, in A. den Hollander, U. Schmidt and W.F. Smelik (eds.), Paratext and Megatext in Jewish and Christian Traditions, forth-coming).
Professor John Townsend, Harvard Divinity School, received his ThD from Harvard in New Testament in 1959. He began teaching in 1960 at the Philadelphia Divinity School, which merged in 1974 with the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, MA, to form the Episcopal Divinity School. He retired from there in 1994, and is now Professor Emeritus of New Testament, Judaism, and Biblical Languages. Since 1994 he has been Visiting Lecturer on Jewish Studies at the Harvard Divinity School, where he teaches an advanced course in Midrash Tanhuma (Buber) and assists in the New Testament doctoral seminars. Also in 1979/80 he was Visiting Professor of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University. His major publication in the area of midrash is his translation of Midrash Tanhuma (Buber) with notes, the last volume of which is in the press at Ktav. He also deals with Rabbinic hermeneutics and gave a presentation on the subject to the Philo of Alexandria Group at the SBL in 1999. In 1972 and again in 1976, the ADL published two volumes of bibliographical essays on Jewish studies which included two lengthy papers of Dr. Townsend (106 pp). The first covered the main Rabbinic writings, while the second sorted out the various collections of minor midrashim. He has also published various shorter articles on Rabbinic subjects. At present he is working on a chapter concerning passages in the New Testament with parallel issues treated by the houses of Hillel and Shammai for the Saldarini memorial volume.
Professor Marc Bregman, Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem, received his BA from the University of California at Berkeley in Judaic Studies in 1968, his MA from the Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles in 1971 and his PhD from The Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1991. Bregman is Professor of Midrash at the Jerusalem campus of the Hebrew Union College, where he has been teaching since 1978. He also taught at The Hebrew University, the Seminary for Judaic Studies in Jerusalem, Ben-Gurion University in Beer Sheba, Yale University, and the University of Washington in Seattle. He has published academic research and belles lettres in Hebrew and English on a wide variety of topics and serves on the editorial board of several scholarly journals. Selected Publications: "The Depiction of the Ram in the Aqedah Mosaic at Beit Alpha," Tarbiz 51 (l982), 306-309 (Hebrew); "El Darshan: Predicador y Maestro de la Epoca Talmudica," Maj'shavot (Buenos Aires) 24:4 (l985), 51-57; "Toward a Textcritical Approach to the Tanhuma-Yelamdenu Midrashim," Tarbiz 54 (l985), 289-292 (Hebrew). "The Parable of the Lame and the Blind -- Epiphanius' Quotation from an Apocryphon of Ezekiel", Journal of Theological Studies 42:1 (1991), 125-138. "Early Sources and Traditions in the Tanhuma-Yelammedenu Midrashim", Tarbiz 60 (1991), 269-274 (Hebrew). "The Art of Retelling", The Sagarin Review 4 (1994), 177-181 (Repr. in The Jerusalem Post and in Jewish Book Annual 53 (1995/ 1996) 177-182). The Four Who Entered Paradise – Introduction and Commentary to a novella by Howard Schwartz (Jason Aronson, Northvale, NJ,1995). "The Riddle of the Ram in Genesis Chapter 22: Jewish-Christian Contacts in Late Antiquity", The Sacrifice of Isaac in the Three Monotheistic Religions, ed. Frederic Manns, Studium Biblicum Franciscanum, Analecta 41 (Jerusalem: Franciscan Printing Press, 1995), 127-145, Fig.1-8; Serah bat Asher: Biblical Origins, Ancient Aggadah and Contemporary Folklore, The Bilgray Lectureship, University of Arizona, 1997; “The Parable of the Lame and the Blind - Epiphanius' Quotation from an Apocryphon of Ezekiel in the Light of Rabbinic and New Testament Parallels, The Apocryphal Ezekiel, ed. by M.E. Stone and B. Wright (in press) and others in: Tarbiz, Hebrew Annual Review, Revue de Qumran; Immanuel, Journal of Jewish Studies; Studies in Aggadah, Targum and Jewish Liturgy in Memory of Joseph Heinemann, Proceedings of the World Congress of Jewish Studies, The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion, the Urbach Memorial Volume. In preparation: The Sign of the Serpent and the Plague of Blood - The Tanhuma-Yelammedenu Midrashim and Exodus Rabbah to Exodus 7:8-25 (Brown Judaica Series). Interpreting Scripture - Text and Techniques for the Study of the Sacrifice of Isaac (Genesis 22); Serah bat Asher -- Lady of Legend.
Members of the Steering Committee, Term starting in the Fall
of 2003:
Professor W. David Nelson, Rosenthal Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies, Brite Divinity School and Texas Christian University.
Professor Burton Visotzky, Nathan and Janet Appleman Professor of Midrash and Inter-religious Studies, Jewish Theological Seminary of America, New York.
Professor Gary G. Porton, Charles and Sarah Drobny Professor of Talmudic Studies and Judaism, Urbana, Illinois.
Professor Herbert Basser, Professor, Queen's University, Canada.
Professor Alan J. Avery-Peck, Kraft-Hiatt Professor in Judaic Studies, College of the Holy Cross.
Professor Isaac Kalimi, Case Western Reserve University.
Karin Zetterholm, B.A., teol. dr., Lund University, Sweden.
Professor Azzan Yadin, Rutgers University.
Professor Edward A. Goldman, Professor of Midrash, Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati.
Members of the Steering Committee, Term starting in the Fall of 2004:
Rationale and
Statement of Aims
Midrash has recently become part of the curriculum at many universities, colleges
and schools of theology and is studied outside the rabbinical seminaries. Presently,
one may notice a surge in midrash studies. Additionally, many scholarly approaches
to midrashic texts are in the planning stages. Midrash is a creative part of
the “Oral Torah” which in Judaism complements the “Written
Torah” (the Hebrew Bible). The rabbinic commentators of late antiquity
and the early medieval period created a tremendous amount of midrashic literature
not only in Israel but also in the Jewish Diaspora. Traces of midrash are already
found in the Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls, but midrash fully developed during
the formative period of Judaism. Midrash was the first venue to interpret the
“Law.” Midrash is a hermeneutic, religious enterprise that comprises
rabbinic, apocalyptic, messianic and mystic traditions. It contains polemical
material that is of interest in respect to the emergence of distinct Christian
and Jewish groups and their relationship to one an-other in the first few centuries
of the Common Era. Midrash has a connection with other Jewish as well as Christian
and Islamic texts. Midrashic analytical reasoning is important for hermeneutics
and literary analysis in general; modern literary theories are often based upon
the hermeneutics of midrash. A Consultation on Midrash allows scholars to focus
on the Hebrew Bible and its interpretative literature and advance hermeneutic
reflections on the similarities/differences between the interpretations of the
Bible.
The field of midrash has not been represented in a unit of its own at the SBL. Research in respect to midrash at the SBL Annual Meetings has only occasionally been presented in sessions dedicated to Philo, Hellenism, Qumran, Bible, and The History of Early Rabbinic Judaism. At a time when many midrashic works are edited in scientific editions and new methods and issues are applied to the study of ancient texts, including Midrashim, the Midrash Consultation would be a venue to present ongoing research projects and new approaches by midrash specialists and scholars from other disciplines such as Bible, Dead Sea Scrolls, Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Targum, Peshitta, Septuagint, New Testament, Patristics, Bible Interpretation, Mysticism, Apocalyptic Literature, Qur’an and Jewish Liturgy.
Indications of Cross-Disciplinary Interests and Diverse Perspectives:
The members of the Steering Committee represent diverse scholarly perspectives
that are appropriate to the study of midrash: Dead Sea Scrolls (the Rewritten
Bible and Qumranic pesher that are pre-forms of midrash); Targum (the Jewish
Aramaic Bible translations that contain material and strategies which are found
in midrash); New Testament literature; and rabbinics. The members of the Steering
Committee have all made significant contributions to the study of midrash and
related literature. Additionally, the steering committee members utilize different
methodologies: literary criticism, theological, religious, Near Eastern, Egyptological,
rabbinic, historical, textual, comparative, iconographic, semiotic, gender-specific
and text-linguistic. The members are from different universities, backgrounds,
and countries, they are male and female, and they are at different stages in
their careers.
Collaboration with Other Units:
As mentioned above, midrash intersects with other areas of biblical studies.
If the Consultation will be approved we will attempt to coordinate some papers
with the History of Early Rabbinic Judaism session. We intend also to enlist
participation from those units that already from time to time turn to midrash.
Such as History of Interpretation, Qumran, Neoplatonism, inter alia.