Scriptural Vitality and the Shaping of Jewish Tradition

When and Where

Monday, September 08, 2025 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
JHB100
Jackman Humanities Building
170 St. George Street, 1st floor

Speakers

Hindy Najman

Description

We are delighted to welcome you to the first event of our 2025-2026 Public Lecture Series! We hope to see everyone for another year of bursting with lectures, conferences, book launches and many more.

Roz and Ralph Halbert Lecture

Hindy Najman (University of Oxford)

Date: Monday, September 8 at 4PM

Location: JHB100 (170 St. George Street)

 

Scriptural Vitality and the Shaping of Jewish Tradition

Judaism is framed by a past and a future which is textual. Scriptural traditions will create patterns for the shaping of law, interpretation, and new conceptual innovation, through the new convergence of cultures in the Hellenistic period. By claiming that the Hellenistic period is one of the most important and formative periods for the history of Judaism, I intended to signal a transformative and life-giving dynamic to a Judaism that continued to survive in the face of great loss throughout its history. 

This talk also explores the important correctives to the history of scholarship and the integration of the Hellenistic period into Jewish Studies. Through the talk, I hope to discuss the broader implications of my book, Scriptural Vitality: Rethinking Philology and Hermeneutics. 

Hindy Najman (MA and PhD Harvard, NELC 1998) is the Oriel and Laing Professor of the Interpretation of Holy Scripture and a fellow at Oriel College.  She is the director and founder of the Centre for the Study of the Bible in Oriel College.  In the University of Oxford, she is a member of the faculty of Theology and Religion, Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, and member of the Sub-faculty Classics, and a member of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.  Prior to her joining the faculty in Oxford, she has held posts at the University of Notre Dame, University of Toronto, and Yale University.  Her areas of research are entanglement of Ancient Culture; Reading Practices in Jewish Antiquity; Comparative Philology; Performance; Formation of the Self and the Subject; Collection and Canon; Authority and Author Function; Biblical Figures and Exemplarity; Practices of Pseudepigraphy and Pseudonymous Attribution; Revelation; Diaspora and Exile; Trauma Studies; and Nature and Law.  Her major publications include Scriptural Vitality: Rethinking Hermeneutics and Philology. Oxford University Press, 2025. Losing the Temple and Recovering the Future: An Analysis of 4 Ezra. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014; Past Renewals: Interpretive Authority, Renewed Revelation, and the Quest for Perfection. Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism 53. Leiden: Brill, 2010.; Seconding Sinai: The Development of Mosaic Discourse in Second Temple Judaism. Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism 77. Leiden: Brill, 2003. She has published 65 articles and has edited 24 volumes. She has contributed as editor and associate editor to a variety of journals and book series, among them are Journal of Biblical Literature; Dead Sea Discoveries and the Journal for the Study of Judaism Supplement Series. Her current projects are on Pluriformity and Hermeneutics, Metathinking in Ancient Judaism, and Aesthetics and Poetics in ancient Jewish Song.

Contact Information

Anne Tanenbaum Centre for Jewish Studies

Sponsors

Anne Tanenbaum Centre for Jewish Studies

Map

170 St. George Street, 1st floor

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