Skip to main navigationSkip to main content
The University of Southampton
The Parkes Institute

Workshop: ‘Comparative Approaches to Apocalyptic Literature In Judaism, Islam and Christianity (c. 600-c. 900)’

Published: 29 May 2023

Registration is open for the upcoming hybrid workshop, ‘Comparative Approaches to Apocalyptic Literature In Judaism, Islam and Christianity (c. 600-c. 900)’. The conference is taking place online and at the University of St Andrews, 5-6 June 2023.

Workshop Schedule

Monday 5 June 2023

9:30-10: Registration and Coffee

10-1 Session One:

Welcome

David Cook (Rice University), “Apocalypse in the History of Damascus: Ibn `Asakir (d. 1176) and the Syrian Muslim Apocalyptic Heritage”

Gaelle Bosseman (Université de Namur), “Characteristics and Reception of Apocalyptic Literature in the Latin West (7th-9th c.): Between Inheritances and Mutations”

Helen Spurling (University of Southampton), “Beyond Ishmael: The Sons of Qedar in Jewish Apocalyptic Traditions”

1-2 Lunch

2-3:30 Session Two:

Tim Greenwood (University of St Andrews), “Seventh-Century Armenian Apocalyptic Traditions in Comparative Perspective”

Andras Kraft (Universität Wien), “Pseudo-Methodios in Sicilian Garb: Revisiting Ninth-Century Byzantine Apocalypticism”

3:30-4 Coffee

4-5 Plenary Session (led by Helen Spurling and James T Palmer with Alex Woolf, University of St Andrews): “How Do We Compare Apocalypses? Cultures, Contexts, and Methods”

5-6         Drinks Reception                          

7            Workshop Dinner for Speakers and Guests

Tuesday 6 June 2023

9-9:30 Coffee

9:30-11 Session Three:

Veronika Wieser (Universität Tübingen), “Mapping Gog and Magog in the Medieval World: New Approaches to Ethnic, Religious and Political Discourses in Apocalyptic Thought”

Constanza Cordoni (Universität Wien), “Spatial Aspects of Apocalypticism in Jewish Traditions”

11-11:30 Coffee

11:30-1 Session Four:

Sebastian Bitsch (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen), “Traces of the Magi. Reflections of Zoroastrian Eschatological Motifs in the Qurʾān”

James T Palmer (University of St Andrews), “The Political Resonances of Apocalyptic Literature in the Seventh and Eighth Centuries: Frameworks and Perspectives”

1-2 Lunch

2-3 Plenary Session: “Themes, Directions, and Future Plans”

Click here to view this information as a PDF.

Registration Information

To register visit our Eventbrite site: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/comparative-approaches-to-apocalyptic-literature-c-600-c-900-tickets-628508986297.

For further queries contact Prof James T Palmer at jtp21@st-andrews.ac.uk.

 

Privacy Settings