Graphic Signs of Religion, Identity, and Authority in Antiquity
Friday, April 4, 2025 - Saturday, April 5, 2025聽| Location TBD聽 | Registration TBD
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In collaboration with聽the School of Critical Studies (Theology & Religious Studies) at the University of Glasgow and聽the Joseph Chair of Catholic Spirituality at Boston College, we are pleased to announce an international conference exploring 鈥淕raphic Signs of Religion, Identity, and Authority in Antiquity.鈥
The modern world is, in many ways, a world driven, and sometimes even defined, by digital images that are projected on screens, transmitted to televisions, and glowing on smartphones. Although the ancient world is separated from the digital age by several millennia, it is a world no less filled with vast occurrences of graphic signs in numerous contexts including altars, inscriptions, manuscripts, stamps,聽seals, amulets, household objects, and traditional media for art. When, in the fourth century, St. Augustine observed聽Quo signo crucis omnis actio Christiana describitur聽(鈥淏y that sign of the cross every Christian act is described鈥;聽De doctrina Christiana,聽2.150), he was not only expressing a sentiment concerning a graphic sign relevant for his day and context but also bringing to expression a principle of graphic signs of religion and identity found in both previous and subsequent eras: graphic signs are presentations of beliefs and norms and distinctive markers of identity and authority.
This conference brings together senior and mid-career scholars in order to provide both scholarly paper presentations designed to advance the scholarship being done on a variety of interrelated topics as well as workshops designed to facilitate discussion and encourage graduate student involvement in collective reflect on how graphic signs have shaped, and continue to shape, religion, representations of authority, and corporate and individual identity. Registration is requested for sessions and workshops, but not required for the public, plenary lecture on Friday night.
Schedule and Registration
Friday, April 4, 2025 | Location TBD | Registration TBD | |
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9:00-10:30 AM | Graphic Signs of Religion and Identity in the Ancient Near East 1聽
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11:00 AM-12:30 PM | Graphic Signs of Religion and Identity in the Ancient Near East 2
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2:00-3:30 PM | Workshops A and B
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3:45-5:15 PM | Graphic Signs of Religion and Identity in the Second Temple Period 1聽
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7:00-8:00 PM | Plenary Lecture聽
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Saturday, April 5, 2025 | Location TBD | Registration TBD | |
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9:00-10:30 AM | Graphic Signs of Religion and Identity in the Second Temple Period 2聽
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11:00 AM-12:30 PM | Workshops C and D聽
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2:00-3:30 PM | 聽Graphic Signs of Religion and Identity in Early Christianity
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Speakers

Madadh Richey
Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible, Brandeis University

Karen Sonik
Professor of Art and Art History, Auburn University

Jordan Miller
Research Associate (VIEWS), University of Cambridge

Brent A. Strawn, D.
Moody Smith Distinguished Professor of Old Testament and Professor of Law, Duke University

Alice Mandell
Assistant Professor and the William Foxwell Albright Chair of Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies,
Johns Hopkins University

David Vanderhooft
Associate Professor of Hebrew Bible, Boston College

Cory Crawford
Associate Professor of Classics and Religious Studies, Ohio University

Timothy Hogue
Assistant Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israelite History and Culture, University of Pennsylvania

Ranjani Atur
Assistant Professor of Classical & Near Eastern Religions & Cultures, University of Minnesota

Jessica Lamont
Assistant Professor of Classics, Yale University

Mark McClay
Assistant Professor of Classics, Hillsdale College

Sarah Iles Johnston
College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Religion, Ohio State University

Jodi Magness
Kenan Distinguished Professor for Teaching Excellence in Early Judaism, UNC 鈥 Chapel Hill

Ann Kuttner
Associate Professor of History of Art, University of Pennsylvania

Gregg Gardner
Professor and The Diamond Chair in Jewish Law and Ethics, University of British Columbia

Felicity Harley-McGowan
Lecturer in the History of Art, Yale Divinity School

Dieter T. Roth
Associate Professor of New Testament, Boston College

Robin Jensen
Patrick O鈥橞rien Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame

Emauele Scieri
Research Assistant in Theology and Religious Studies, University of Glasgow

Garrick Allen
Professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism, University of Glasgow
Campus Map and Parking
Campus Map and Parking:
Parking is available at the nearby Beacon Street and Commonwealth Avenue Garages.
Boston College is also accessible via public transportation (MBTA B Line - Boston College).
Boston College strongly encourages conference participants to receive the COVID-19 vaccination before attending events on campus.