Daniel Boyarin @ UPenn (“A Traveling Homeland: The Babylonian Talmud as Diaspora”)

I found this announcement online, and thought others might be interested:

February 18, 19, and 21, 2013, 5:00pm, Terrace Room (ground floor), Claudia Cohen Hall, 249 South 36th Street, University of Pennsylvania

In place of the lachrymose notion of diaspora as a condition of suffering and longing for an alleged homeland, Daniel Boyarin contends that the Babylonian Talmud figures Babylonia as a second homeland for the Jews. In his three lectures, Boyarin will present a new definition for diaspora as a phenomenon in which two or more communities are simultaneously culturally related to one another and to their specific local settings. He will show how the Talmud enacts this new definition in its very form and content and will argue that as it travels through time and space, the Talmud produces ever new diasporic formations.

February 18: Dispersing Diaspora: The Talmud as Diasporist Manifesto
February 19: The Philology of Diaspora: The Talmud Enacts Diaspora
February 21: Searching for the Routes: The Talmud Makes Diasporas

Daniel Boyarin is Hermann P. and Sophia Taubman Professor of Talmudic Culture in the Departments of Near Eastern Studies and Rhetoric, University of California at Berkeley.  He is author of Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic CultureDying for God: Martyrdom and the Making of Christianity and Judaism, and Border Lines: The Partition of Judaeo-Christianity,among other works.

All three lectures will take place at 5:00 in the Terrace Room of Claudia Cohen Hall
A reception, sponsored by the Jewish Studies Program of the University of Pennsylvania, will follow the first lecture on February 18.

This series of three lectures is made possible through a grant of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to the School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Pennsylvania Press in support of scholarship on cross-cultural contacts.

Free and open to public, No RSVP necessary

About zjb

Zachary Braiterman is Professor of Religion in the Department of Religion at Syracuse University. His specialization is modern Jewish thought and philosophical aesthetics. http://religion.syr.edu
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