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14 Nov 09

Introduction to New Testament History and Literature — Open Yale Courses

SWEET! An historical approach to Christianity and the New Testament from Yale, following on the heels of Prof. Christine Hayes' fantastic "Introduction to the Hebrew Bible ("Old" Testament). Full semester of courses to download for the iPod.

oyc.yale.edu/...introduction-to-new-testament - Preview

opencourseware christianity bible history criticism

12 Sep 09

Toppled Civilizations and Biblical Tales

Noah's flood (and the earlier Gilgamesh version) a myth centered on the formation of the Black Sea in 5600? It's a scientific controversy I've never heard about. Fascinating.

www.historyfiles.co.uk/...potamiaLostCivilisations01.htm - Preview

bible judaism myth gilgamesh

  • There were certainly several
    largescale floods in Ancient Mesopotamia, with perhaps one of
    the worst being that which took place between about 2900-2750
    BC. This was probably the legendary flood of Sumerian
    literature, which was handed down through the generations to
    become Noah's great flood, but it may have carried a memory of a
    far earlier and greater flood: that of the Mediterranean
    breaking into the Black Sea in about 5600 BC [Ed].



  • There were certainly several
    largescale floods in Ancient Mesopotamia, with perhaps one of
    the worst being that which took place between about 2900-2750
    BC. This was probably the legendary flood of Sumerian
    literature, which was handed down through the generations to
    become Noah's great flood, but it may have carried a memory of a
    far earlier and greater flood: that of the Mediterranean
    breaking into the Black Sea in about 5600 BC [Ed].
09 Jul 09

Salon.com Books | History is bunk after all

So much of this pertains to the histories in the Bible as well. Much more complex than the simple and dangerous ways they're represented in our cultures today. Prof. Hayes' Open Yale lectures on the Old Testament explicate this beautifully, if only implicitly.

www.salon.com/...print.html - Preview

history historiography bible loewen judaism

  • Some people embrace "bad history" because it reinforces their national, regional or ethnic identity, as in the case of the Serbs or those Japanese conservatives who want archaeologists kept out of the ancient tombs of the royal family for fear that the remains found there will indicate that the emperors have non-Japanese ancestors. People seeking to keep the Irish divided once perpetrated the myth that only Protestants fought alongside the British in World War I, when in fact 210,000 Irish Catholics and nationalists volunteered. Others use the past to deflect attention from their own mischief, like the governing elites in China, who dwell on its history of colonialism, persecution and victimization at the hands of the West in order to invalidate any criticism from outsiders as more of the same.
  • "Dangerous Games" calls for "professional historians" (by which I think MacMillan means "academics") to "contest the one-sided, even false, histories that are out there in the public domain. If we do not, we allow our leaders and opinion makers to use history to bolster false claims and justify bad and foolish policies."
  • 4 more annotations...
25 Jun 09

Auerbach's Odysseus' Scar

A lit crit classic now available online. How cool.

www.westmont.edu/...OdysseusScar.html - Preview

homer greeks judaism bible

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iraq's damaged Babylon hopes for revival

  • The main ruins you can see now are of Nebuchadnezzar's northern palace, some 2,600 years old, and parts of the old city walls.
  • Mr Shahid hopes that one day, proper archaeological exploration will resume.

    "We have many important historical sites here," he says, "but still only a quarter of the area has been excavated."

    Its importance, and that of the many other ancient sites in Iraq, cannot be overestimated.

    Long before there were any towns or cities in Europe, Babylon was thriving.

    Modern civilisation as we know it now - built around organised, planned cities - first emerged in what is now Iraq.

    Before that, humans had only lived as nomads.

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