IOQS

The International Organization for Qumran Studies

Category: Conferences (page 2 of 2)

The Rose-Marie Lewent Conference – The Dead Sea Scrolls at 70 (New York, November 16–17, 2017)

The Rose-Marie Lewent Conference

ISBL/EABS Joint Meeting in Berlin, Germany, August 7–11, 2017

Please note the Qumran (and related) Program Units at the ISBL/EABS Joint Meeting in Berlin, Germany, August 7–11, 2017!

Society of Biblical Literature International Meeting (ISBL)

QUMRAN AND THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS
Jutta Jokiranta / Matthew Goff

The unit provides forum for presentation and discussion of views relating to the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Qumran settlement, and the people of that place and of those documents.

The Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls unit plans four sessions:

1. “Dead Sea Scrolls and the Genre Apocalypse” will be convened jointly with the Apocalyptic Literature program unit. This session will reconsider questions related to genre and definitions of apocalyptic literature, in light of the full publication of the Dead Sea Scrolls, exploring issues such as apocalyptic rhetoric, social setting, and eschatology. Some papers are invited but we also welcome proposals.

2. “Tracing and Facing Possibility of Forgeries: Methodology, Ethics, Policies” is an open session on the status of unprovenanced material in Qumran studies. SBL has recently announced a new policy on unprovenanced materials. In summer 2016, the controversy over the “Gospel of Jesus’s wife” fragment was traced to Berlin by Ariel Sabar. Around that time, Qumran scholars began to express skepticism about the authenticity of some fragments attributed to Qumran which have surfaced since 2002. We invite papers to engage one or more of the following topics in a cooperative and collegial spirit:

  • Developments and discussion on post-2002 DSS fragments/other recent material: What has happened and what can we learn from these processes?
  • Methodology: How to identify forgeries? Which technological/material/paleographical analyses are available/most important?
  • Ethics: Whose responsibility is it to look into the nature of the material in collections? To what extent can their history and provenance be traced? How are discovery narratives constructing reality?
  • Policies: To what extent is the new SBL policy helpful? What implications can be expected?

3. The third session is an invited interdisciplinary session that will explore intersections between the Dead Sea Scrolls and Manichean literature, in particular the Turfan collection, which is kept in Berlin.

4. For our final session we welcome proposals on any issue pertaining to the Dead Sea Scrolls.

European Association of Biblical Studies (EABS) Annual Conference

THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS
Mika Pajunen / Jeremy Penner

The Research Group provides a forum for discussing the Dead Sea Scrolls, with a particular emphasis on worship in the Scrolls and in other sources from the late Second Temple period, such as, some of the late books of the Hebrew Bible (e.g., Chronicles, Daniel, and some Psalms), the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, as well as available inscriptions and archaeological evidence.

For the 2017 meeting in Berlin we invite proposals for two different sessions. The first is a partly invited thematic session that will focus on the topic of ritual and method as it relates to worship. For the second session we invite papers dealing with any aspect of the Dead Sea Scrolls. All proposals related to these two overall topics are welcome, but preference is given to papers that bring the Scrolls into a dialogue with other available sources from the late Second Temple period.

International Conference, Metz, France, October 17–19, 2017

TEXTUAL PLURALITY BEYOND THE BIBLICAL TEXTS
International Conference, Metz, October 17-19 2017

For more information, visit this page.

Conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lublin, Poland, 25–26 October 2017

Conference “The Dead Sea Scrolls Seventy Years Later”
Lublin, Poland, 25–26 October 2017

Information about the conference:

call for papers:

invited speakers:
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