📚 Save Big on Books! Enjoy 10% off when you spend £100 and 20% off when you spend £200 (or the equivalent in supported currencies)—discount automatically applied when you add books to your cart before checkout! 🛒

Reading: Performance and Materiality in Hebrew and Aramaic Traditions - cover image

Book Series

Copyright

Hector M. Patmore; Hindy Najman; Stefan Schorch; Jeroen Verrijssen; Hanneke van der Schoor. Copyright of individual chapters are maintained by the chapter author(s).

Published On

2025-07-21

ISBN

Paperback978-1-80511-548-9
Hardback978-1-80511-549-6
PDF978-1-80511-550-2

Language

  • English

Print Length

496 pages (xii+484)

Dimensions

Paperback156 x 34 x 234 mm(6.14" x 1.34" x 9.21")
Hardback156 x 38 x 234 mm(6.14" x 1.5" x 9.21")

Weight

Paperback937g (33.05oz)
Hardback1118g (39.44oz)

OCLC Number

1528869534

THEMA

  • 2CSJ
  • 2CSA
  • JBCC2
  • QRJ

BISAC

  • REL006630
  • REL040040
  • REL006210
  • LIT004190
  • HIS022000
  • SOC002010

Keywords

  • Hebrew Scriptures
  • Aramaic Traditions
  • Material Culture
  • Performance Studies
  • Ancient Textuality
  • Jewish Heritage

Reading

Performance and Materiality in Hebrew and Aramaic Traditions

This volume contains the proceedings the 'Reading: Performance and Materiality in Hebrew and Aramaic Traditions' colloquium, hosted at the University of Oxford in 2023, and jointly sponsored by the Oriel Centre for the Study of the Bible and the European Research Council project, 'TEXTEVOLVE.'

The aim of the colloquium was to investigate Jewish approaches to the reading of texts, with a focus on reading practices that were applied to Hebrew and Aramaic texts in antiquity and the early Middle Ages. It explored, in particular, how these were shaped by material and non-textual aspects (oral traditions, performative context, philological values, etc). Among the questions it addressed were: How did non-textual components determine reading? To what extent did materiality shape or limit readings? How did reading practices shape the texts themselves? What values guided how texts were modified and variant texts evaluated? What determined which form or version of a text was read and according to what conventions? The responses to these questions collected in this volume highlight the tensions between authority and creativity, preservation and innovation, understanding and misapprehension, knowledge and ignorance, which shaped Jewish practices of reading.

Contents

Introduction

(pp. 1–14)
  • Hector M. Patmore
  • Hindy Najman
  • Ruthanne Brooks
  • Stefan Schorch
  • Jeroen Verrijssen
  • Hanneke van der Schoor
  • Joseph Harrison
  • Willem Smelik

Contributors

Hector M. Patmore

(editor)
Associate Professor in the Research Unit Biblical Studies at the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies at KU Leuven

Hindy Najman

(editor)
Oriel and Laing Professor of the Interpretation of Holy Scripture at Oriel College at University of Oxford

Jeroen Verrijssen

(editor)
Postdoctoral Researcher at KU Leuven

Hanneke van der Schoor

(editor)