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77565-01 - Kolloquium: Altes Testament und Semitische Sprachwissenschaft (1 KP)

Semester Frühjahrsemester 2026
Angebotsmuster einmalig
Dozierende Sonja Ammann (sonja.ammann@unibas.ch, BeurteilerIn)
Samuel Arnet (samuel.arnet@unibas.ch)
Inhalt Mittwoch, 15. April, 18.15 Uhr: Dr. Jesse Mirotznik (HU Jerusalem)
The Portrayal of Pagan Worship in the Hebrew Bible and Ancient Judaism

How did Jews in the ancient world depict the practices of their pagan contemporaries? In his recent monograph, The Portrayal of Pagan Worship in the Hebrew Bible and Ancient Judaism (Cambridge University Press, 2025), Dr. Mirotznik argues that a decisive change occurred in ancient Jewish representations of the Other around the 3rd century B.C.E. In Israelite/Jewish literature composed up to this point, the worship of other gods and the reverence of their icons is consistently depicted as sincere, and its appeal, whether to Israelites or non-Israelites, is, as a rule, not questioned. At some point around the end of the 3rd century B.C.E., however, a new form of argument arises: that the worship of other gods and the reverence of their icons is, in fact, an entirely unattractive practice, and that even its practitioners must inwardly reject it. In this lecture, Dr. Mirotznik will explore this shift through several key textual examples from the Hebrew Bible and from its ancient Jewish interpretation.

Montag, 4. Mai, 18.15 Uhr: Dr. Dominic S. Irudayaraj (Pontifical Biblical Institute, Rome / Hekima University College, Nairobi)
Desolate Places, Resolute People: Violence and Identity in Isaiah

Violence in the Bible remains a challenging and troubling theme. Informed by a pedagogy-and-ministry-informed positionality (in Nairobi, Kenya) and with recourse to two compelling insights—Marlow’s ecological triangle and Lynch’s “grammar of violence,”— Dr. Irudayaraj’s talk focuses on the violent details in four select Isaian texts that constitute the bookends (chapters 1 and 66) and bridge texts (chapters 24 and 34) of the book of Isaiah. In each instance, a four-step process is pursued: (i) naming the violence and its disturbing details; (ii) a close re/reading of other details in the text—details that qualify the dominant tone of violence; (iii) situating both details in their relevant contexts: socio-historical, literary-rhetorical, and theological; and (iv) inquiring into their significance for prophetic attempts at identity adumbration.

Mittwoch, 27. Mai, 18.15 Uhr: Dr. Vladimir Olivero (Harvard University)
When Variants Speak: What Can Textual Criticism tell us about the Linguistic Periodization of Biblical Hebrew

Over the past two decades years, Hebraists have produced increasingly fine-grained descriptions of linguistic change in Biblical Hebrew, particularly in the domains of syntax and semantics.
This paper proposes a new approach to historical linguistics that takes into account the textual history of the Hebrew Bible. It examines the linguistic profile of late readings and additions within the so-called Classical corpus in order to test and refine the accepted periodization of Biblical Hebrew, demonstrating how linguistics and textual criticism can be meaningfully integrated.

 

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Einzeltermine

Datum Zeit Raum
Mittwoch 15.04.2026 18.15-20.00 Uhr Rosshofgasse (Schnitz), Seminarraum S 01
Montag 04.05.2026 18.15-20.00 Uhr Theologie, Grosser Seminarraum 002
Mittwoch 27.05.2026 18.15-20.00 Uhr Theologie, Grosser Seminarraum 002
Module Doktoratsstudium Theologie: Empfehlungen (Doktoratsstudium - Theologische Fakultät (Studienbeginn vor 01.02.2024))
Doktoratsstudium Theologie: Empfehlungen (Promotionsfach: Theologie (Dr. theol.))
Doktoratsstudium Theologie: Empfehlungen (Promotionsfach: Theologie (Dr. phil.))
Interner Wahlbereich Theologie: Empfehlungen (Bachelorstudium: Theologie)
Interner Wahlbereich Theologie: Empfehlungen (Masterstudium: Theologie)
Modul: Geschichte, Literatur, Religion (Master Studienfach: Jüdische Studien)
Modul: Semitische Philologie (SPh) (Masterstudium: Theologie)
Modul: Vertiefung in Altertumswissenschaften (Bachelor Studienfach: Altertumswissenschaften)
Modul: Vertiefung in Altertumswissenschaften (Bachelor Studiengang: Altertumswissenschaften)
Wahlbereich Bachelor Jüdische Studien: Empfehlungen (Bachelor Studienfach: Jüdische Studien)
Wahlbereich Bachelor Theologie: Empfehlungen (Bachelor Studienfach: Theologie)
Wahlbereich Master Theologie: Empfehlungen (Master Studienfach: Theologie)
Prüfung Leistungsnachweis
An-/Abmeldung zur Prüfung Anmelden: Belegen; Abmelden: Dozierende
Wiederholungsprüfung eine Wiederholung, bester Versuch zählt
Skala Pass / Fail
Belegen bei Nichtbestehen nicht wiederholbar
Zuständige Fakultät Theologische Fakultät, studiendekanat-theol@unibas.ch
Anbietende Organisationseinheit Fachbereich Theologie

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