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Early Jewish and Christian Magical Traditions in Comparison and Contact

Sanzo


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{"@context":"https://schema.org/","@id":"http://doi.org/10.25592/uhhfdm.9869","@type":"ScholarlyArticle","creator":[{"@type":"Person","affiliation":"Joseph","name":"Sanzo"}],"datePublished":"2021-12-13","description":"<p>This article introduces the project Early Jewish and Christian Magical Traditions in Comparison and Contact, the first large-scale interdisciplinary comparative study of Jewish and Christian magical objects from Late Antiquity. It is expected to significantly improve knowledge of ancient magic and early Jewish&ndash;Christian relations in lived religion (i.e. religion as it was actually practiced in everyday life). The project examines the local and global features of these objects&mdash;and the social contexts behind them&mdash;through a synthetic and innovative interpretive framework, which draws upon various academic fields including religious studies, sociology, and art history. The project&rsquo;s illumination of the late antique lived contexts of early Jews and Christians will help rewrite the history of two of the world&rsquo;s most prolific religions.&nbsp;</p>","headline":"Early Jewish and Christian Magical Traditions in Comparison and Contact","identifier":"http://doi.org/10.25592/uhhfdm.9869","image":"https://zenodo.org/static/img/logos/zenodo-gradient-round.svg","keywords":["Manuscript studies","Jewish studies","Magical texts"],"license":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","name":"Early Jewish and Christian Magical Traditions in Comparison and Contact","url":"https://www.fdr.uni-hamburg.de/record/9869"}

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