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Maren R. Niehoff

    April 16, 1963

    Maren R. Niehoff delves deeply into Jewish thought and ancient texts. Her work focuses on the ways ancient Jewish writings were interpreted and how they intersected with the broader scholarly traditions of their time. Niehoff investigates how authors shaped identity and culture through literary analysis, and how figures and their narratives evolved in later writings. Her scholarship illuminates the intricate relationships between religious tradition, literary studies, and intellectual history.

    Judentum und Hellenismus
    Culture, Religion, and Politics in the Greco-Roman World - 1: Journeys in the Roman East: Imagined and Real
    • In the Roman Empire, travelling was something of a central feature, facilitating commerce, pilgrimage, study abroad, tourism, and ethnographic explorations. The present volume investigates for the first time intellectual aspects of this phenomenon by giving equal attention to pagan, Jewish, and Christian perspectives. A team of experts from different fields argues that journeys helped construct cultural identities and negotiate between the local and the particular on the one hand, and wider imperial discourses on the other. A special point of interest is the question of how Rome engages the attention of intellectuals from the Greek East and offers new opportunities of self-fashioning. Pagans, Jews, and Christians shared similar experiences and constructed comparable identities in dialogue, sometimes polemics, with each other. The collection addresses the following themes: real and imagined geography, reconstructing encounters in distant places, between the bodily and the holy, Jesus' travels from different perspectives, and destination Rome. The articles in each section are arranged in chronological order, ranging from early imperial texts to rabbinic and patristic literature.

      Culture, Religion, and Politics in the Greco-Roman World - 1: Journeys in the Roman East: Imagined and Real