L’université de Tel Aviv accueille un colloque sur “L’histoire du cycle de Jacob” les 17 et 18 décembre prochains.
Ce colloque international s’inscrit dans le cadre du projet Sinergia sur “L’histoire du Pentateuque” financé par le Fonds national suisse.
Monday, December 17
09:00-09:15 – Coffee and Gathering
09:15–09:30 – Introduction to the Jacob Track in the Sinergia Project:
Aims and Achievements (Israel Finkelstein, Oded Lipschits,
Christophe Nihan, Thomas Römer, Konrad Schmid)
09:30–11:00 – Compilation, Redaction and Reception of the Jacob Cycle
Chair: Oded Lipschits
Konrad Schmid: Shifting Political Theologies in the Literary
Development of the Jacob Cycle
Dalit Rom Shiloni: Genesis 31: A Key to Question the Compilation of
the Jacob Stories
11:00–11:30 – Coffee Break
11:30–13:00
Guy Darshan: Jacob Traditions and their Reception in Prophetic Literature
Meira Polliack: The Priestly Account of the End of Jacob’s Life: A New Proposal
13:00–14:30 – Lunch Break
14:30–16:00 – The Jacob Cycle in its Historical Context
Chair: Israel Finkelstein
Christian Frevel: Jacob as the Father of the Twelve Tribes (Genesis
29–31): Literary and Historical Considerations
Friederike Neumann: Jacob, Laban and the Two Daughters: Insights into
the Formation of the Jacob-Laban-Story (Genesis 29–31)
16:00–16:30 – Coffee Break
16:30–18:45
Thomas Römer: How Jacob Became Israel: Thoughts on Genesis 28 and 32
Jakob Wöhrle: Jacob from Israel and Jacob from Judah Reflections upon
the Formation and the Historical Backgrounds of the Jacob Story
Benedikt Hensel: Israel and Edom in the Jacob Narrative
Tuesday, December 18
09:00-09:15 – Coffee and Gathering
09:00–10:30 – Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on the Pre-P
Jacob Cycle
Chair: Christophe Nihan
Assaf Kleiman: Aram and Israel in the Northern Gilead: A Long-Term Perspective
Omer Sergi: The Jacob Cycle and Israelite Identity: Resurrecting
Israel’s Association of Kin
10:30–11:00 – Coffee Break
11:00–13:15 – Bethel: Archaeology and Its Role in the Jacob Cycle
Chair: Konrad Schmid
Aaron Tavger: “And He Called the Name of that Place Bethel” (Genesis
28:19): Archaeology and Geographical-History at the Sanctuary of
Bethel
Oded Lipschits: Archaeology and Text, Text and Archaeology:
Methodological Notes and Bethel as a Case-Study
Israel Finkelstein: Bethel: What is There and What “Should be There”
(to Fit a Theory), But is Not There
J’ai hâte d’y être ! 🙂
Pour tout renseignement, rendez-vous sur le site Internet du projet.