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Latest episodes from From Israelite to Jew

Who is a Jew? No, Really.

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2011


The traditional legal definition of a Jew is well-known: the child of a Jewish mother or a convert. Sure, there is a little fuzziness around the edges as Orthodox Jews in Israel in particular debate what makes a kosher conversion, and whether conversions can be retroactively revoked. But both Orthodox and Conservative Jewish institutions share their commitment to this legal definition. Jewish identity is for all intents and purposes black and white, verified or falsified with objective markers.Yet as both the U.S. census and Susan Fendrick in a recent article remind us, life is not lived in black and white with objective markers. These legal definitions matter greatly to bean counters and lawyers (or rabbis or others in the role of lawyers), and to people only when they run up against bean counters and lawyers. As Fendrick sensitively suggests, it is not that legal definitions of Jewishness are wrong, only that they don't adequately reflect lived experience. As for the U.S. census, they can't figure out what to do with "Race" when many people, flummoxed by the check-off boxes, liberally select multiple identities.Jews in antiquity had, if anything, even more fluid identities as Jews. Prior to the Rabbis, there were few necessary objective markers of Jewishness (circumcision for men was one, but even it was not sufficient). For most of the people most of the time this would never have been a problem; they had few if any encounters regarding their Jewishness with bean counters or lawyers. There were, of course, some exceptions: when the Romans leveled a tax on all Jews throughout the Empire following the disasterous revolt that led to the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE, Jews had to be counted. We have little idea how they did this (although Martin Goodman has a provocative articleon its ramifications). Jewish communities locally handled their own "conversions", and it is intriguing to consider how converts, their families, and different Jewish communities might have had very different understandings of who they actually "were". In this vein it is interesting to consider the famous CCAR's statement on patrilineal descent, which requires at least one Jewish parent and an affirmative act of identity. This is legally a nightmare: it would allow for cases in which Jewish identity was stripped and in which the children of two Jewish parents would not be considered Jewish. I doubt that there have ever been more than a few cases of either of these scenarios, if only because there is a tacit acknowledgement that although this is meant as a legal definition it is a poor one. It is, in fact, more descriptive than prescriptive, a comment on the way that Jewish identity is actually enacted today, with or without legal definitions, in living color rather than black and white.

From Israelite to Jew: 6: The Torah

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010


In this episode I discuss the historical formation of the Torah, or Pentateuch, and provide an introduction to the documentary hypothesis. I am now receiving technical support from Brown University, and the quality of the audio is improved.The episode can be heard here. More download options can be found here.The podcast can also be heard on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 22: After the Destruction: A Beginning or and End?

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2010


The Jerusalem Temple was destroyed in 70 CE, a moment that typically is said to mark in Jewish historiography the end of the "second temple period" and beginning of the "rabbinic period." But to what extent did things really change?In this episode, the last of this series, I also reflect more broadly on the series.The episode can be heard here, or on the player below. More download options are available here. It is also available on iTunes and iTunesU.

From Israelite to Jew: 21: Destruction

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2010


The Jewish revolt in Judea that began in 66 CE ended with the Roman destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in 70. Why, though, did the Jews in Judea and the Galilee revolt? And why did the Romans destroy the Temple?The episode can be heard here or on the player below. More download options can be found here. It can also be heard through iTunes and iTunesU.

From Israelite to Jew: 20: The First Century

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2009


This episode focuses on the years 6 CE - 66 CE, and the events leading up to the Jewish revolt. This episode includes discussions of Roman administration and the Sanhedrin.The episode can be heard here or on the player below. More download options are here. It can also be found on iTunes and iTunesU.

From Israelite to Jew: 19: Josephus

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2009


Without the works of the historian Josephus (36/37 CE - ca. 95) we would know little about the history of the Jews in antiquity. Yet Josephus, as a historian and a man, was a complex figure: was he a Jewish patriot or a Roman toady?The episode can be heard here or on the player below. More download options are here. The episode can also be heard on iTunes or iTunesU.

From Israelite to Jew: 18: Jesus and Other Strange Jews

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2009


In the first century CE the area around Jerusalem teemed with small Jewish religious groups, or sects. This episode focuses on three of the most well-known of these groups: Pharisees, Sadducees, and the early followers of Jesus.The episode is available here, or in the player below. Other download options are here. It is also available on iTunes (and now on iTunesU).

From Israelite to Jew: 17: The Dead Sea Scrolls

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2009


What are the Dead Sea scrolls? This episode discusses their discovery, contents, and meaning.The episode can be heard here or on the player below. More download options are here. The podcast can also be heard on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 16: Philo

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2009


Philo Judaeus is the most well-known Jewish philosopher from antiquity. Living in Alexandria from ca. 20 BCE - 50 CE, Philo produced an astonishing corpus that has often been held up as a signal example of "Hellenistic Judaism." Who was Philo, and what was he up to?The episode can be heard here, or on the player below. More download options are here. It is also available on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 15: Herod the Great

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2009


Was Herod the Great a brilliant ruler or a savage brute? This episode traces Herod's rise to power and his reign, 40 - 4 BCE.The episode can be heard here, or on the player below. More download options are here. It can also be heard on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 14: Hellenistic Judaism

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2009


The religion of the Jews who lived in the Greek speaking areas of the Mediterranean is commonly called "Hellenistic Judaism". This episode explains why scholars use this term; why it is less useful than it might seem; and how it is that most of these Jews would have worshiped the God of Israel.The episode can be heard here, or in the player below. Other download options are here. It can also be accessed on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 13: Origins of Jewish Sectarianism

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2009


On the origins of Jewish sectarianism in the second to first centuries, BCE, with a focus on Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes, and (if different) the first inhabitants of Qumran, where the Dead Sea scrolls would be found.The episode can be heard here, or on the player below. More download options are here. The podcast is also available on iTunes.One listener recently alerted me (thank you!) that the audio files continue to not be properly "balanced" between left and right sides. We have figured out the cause for this, and will fix it beginning with the next episode.

From Israelite to Jew: 12: The Hasmonean Kings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2009


A discussion of Judah's consolidation of power around 162 BCE to the last of the Hasmonean kings, in 30 BCE.The episode can be heard here, or on the player below. More download options are here. The podcast is also available on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 11: The Revolt of the Maccabees

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2009


Why did the Maccabees revolt around 165 BCE? This episode explores both the revolt of the Maccabees and the origins of the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah.The episode can be heard here or on the player below; more download options are available here. The podcast is also available on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 10: Jubilees and 1 Enoch

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2009


A discussion of two books dating from the third or second centuries, BCE, Jubilees and 1 Enoch. Both books, part of a collection traditionally known as "the Pseudepigrapha," testify to a Jewish understanding of continuing direct divine revelation in the Hellenistic period.The podcast can be heard here, or through the player below. It can also be found in iTunes. More download options can be found here.

From Israelite to Jew: 9: Hellenism Arrives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2009


A discussion of Alexander's conquest of west Asia and its aftermath (323 - 200 BCE). What is "Hellenism," and how did the Jews react to it? Particular attention is paid to the Septuagint, Ecclesiastes, and Ecclesiasticus.The podcast can be heard here; more downloading options are here. You can also use the player below: The podcast is also accessible on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 8: Jews of the Persian Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2009


This episode discusses two Jewish communities outside of Jerusalem, that represented by the biblical book of Esther, and that of Elephantine, Egypt. It takes place in the fifth to fourth centuries, BCE.The podcast can be heard here; more downloading options are here. You can also use the player below: The episode can also be found in iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 7: Nehemiah

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2009


The seventh episode of the podcast, "From Israelite to Jew." This episode deals primarily with the career and reforms of Nehemiah, which lasted from 445 BCE to around 432 BCE. The podcast can be heard here; more downloading options are here. You can also use the player below: You will also find the podcast on iTunes.

The Hedgehog, the Fox, and the Talmud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2009


This is not an installment of "From Israelite to Jew," but is instead a reading of an essay recently published on Zeek, an online journal. The written version is here.This is a meditation on the Talmud as read through Tolstoy, and how such a reading can generate a useful stance in the modern world. Having just written that, I should quickly add that that makes it sound more abstruse than it really is. Check it out and let me know!I'll be back to "From Israelite to Jew" next week or the week after.The podcast can be heard here; download options are here. You can also stream from the player below: .It is also available on iTunes. My thanks to Giovi Roz and the Instructional Technology Group at Brown University for their technical assistance.

From Israelite to Jew: 5: Ezra

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2009


The fifth episode of the podcast, "From Israelite to Jew." This episode deals primarily with the career of Ezra, in 458 BCE. I discuss intermarriage in the Bible and the emergence of the Torah as a source of authority in Israel.The podcast can be heard here; more downloading options are here. I am continuing to have some technical problems embedding the player.You will also find the podcast on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 4: Return

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2009


The fourth episode of the podcast, "From Israelite to Jew." This episode traces the first two returns from Babylonia to Jerusalem, first under Sheshbazzar and then under the dual leadership of Zerubbabel and Joshua, and the building of the Second Temple (539 BCE - 516).The podcast can be heard here; more downloading options are here. I am having some technical problems at the moment embedding the player.You will also find the podcast on iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 2: Religion of Israel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2009


This is the second episode of the podcast, "From Israelite to Jew." It focuses on the religion of ancient Israel, as reflected in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and archaeological finds.The podcast can be heard here, or click on the player below. It can also be accessed via iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 3: Exile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2009


The third episode of the podcast, "From Israelite to Jew." This episode discusses the events leading up to the destruction of the First Temple in Jerusalem in 586 BCE, and the resulting exile.The podcast can be heard here, or click on the player below. It can also be accessed via iTunes.

From Israelite to Jew: 1: Between Faith and Reason

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2008


This episode introduces my podcast series, "From Israelite to Jew." In it I examine the relationship between religion and its academic study, suggesting that the two ways of understanding religion are not diametrically opposed.The first episode can be heard here. My Podcast Alley feed! {pca-fd7d320def25fda70324cbf5dc2940b6}

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