Teaching and Learning via the Network
Religious Studies Publications Journal -- Contents
Project Number One - 1992
ISSN 1188-5734
An all electronic, network distributed serial for Religious Studies
Purpose
To disseminate via the global computer networks;
- The table of contents, standard bibliographic information, abstracts
and reviews of new and recent publications in Religious Studies
- Software reviews of computer programs relevant to Religious Studies
research
- Prepublication papers, dissertation abstracts, solicitations for
manuscripts, and provide a central source of information on all networked
documents of interest to Religious Studies and related fields.
Goal
To provide a comprehensive network distributed source of information on
Religious Studies publications and software tools.
Overview
The RELIGIOUS STUDIES PUBLICATIONS JOURNAL, subtitled the CONTENTS
project is a networked electronic journal that brings together academic
publishers and online scholars in Religious Studies and related fields. This
journal provides an information service to academic publishers and the more
than one thousand scholars in Religious Studies and related fields who are
online with BITNET, Internet, and other international computer networks.
CONTENTS' primary function is the posting of table of contents, standard
bibliographic, pricing and ordering information, abstracts and reviews of new
books and journal issues of relevance to academics in the broad field of
Religious Studies. The project also publishes software reviews of programs
essential to computer assisted research. CONTENTS extends the scope of
electronic publication by combining reviews and abstracts with table of
contents and ordering information of new books and journals in print.
Publishers are encouraged to provide an electronic mail contact address so as
to enable CONTENTS' subscribers to order texts via the network. This
electronic journal is designed in anticipation of the developing
commercialization of the academic networks and anticipates the growing trend
within publishing houses of accommodating individual chapter and single
article purchases.
The CONTENTS project operates by obtaining permission from participating
publishers to scan the table of contents from new and recent books and
journals and disseminates this information in electronic text to its
subscribers. To the table of contents is added information on the publisher,
number of pages, price, abstracts and, if available, online ordering contact.
Publishers also are encourage to submit abstracts, book notes and reviews
for electronic republication. See below for a sample posting of a recent
publication to CONTENTS.
A supplement to CONTENTS, Lists in Review, provides an overview of many of
the Listserv lists (online academic conferences) of relevance to Religious
Studies. A team of editors surveys individual lists and records lists of
subject keywords that will serve to indicate what has been discussed on any
given online conference. These list summaries are compiled by the supplement
editor and posted as a short file to CONTENTS and archived on a fileserver.
This collection will allow networked researchers to quickly survey what has
been discussed on dozens of lists and then retrieve past conversations from
a list's logbook.
CONTENTS will also post information on works in progress, conference
announcements, solicitations for manuscripts, dissertations, networked
documents and audio-visual resources of relevance to Religious Studies. All
publication records posted by the CONTENTS project are archived via LISTSERV
at Listserv@Uottawa or Listserv@Acadvm1.Uottawa.Ca and may be searched or
downloaded by the network community. Eventually, all CONTENTSrecords will be
fully searchable as an online public access database via TELNET.
At present, the RELIGIOUS STUDIES PUBLICATIONS JOURNAL has over four hundred
subscribers in more than seventeen countries, including Colombia, Norway,
Netherlands, Israel, Hong Kong, South Africa, Ireland, Germany, Australia,
Austria, United Kingdom, Czechoslovakia, France, Sweden, Brazil, Italy,
Finland, Saudi-Arabia, Taiwan, and of course, Canada and United States.
There are nine publishers who have joined the project thus far: Blackwell
Publishers, Oxford (UK), Sheffield Academic Press (UK), Catholic University
of America Press (US), University of Scranton Press (US), Penn State Press
(US), State University of New York Press (US), Jewish Bible Association
(Israel), and two Canadian publishers; Wilfrid Laurier University Press, and
Columban Enterprises (McGill). At this point, both Wilfrid Laurier
University Press and Penn State Press are sending new volumes to the project
for review.
The RELIGIOUS STUDIES PUBLICATIONS JOURNAL consists of
CONTENTS Team
Michael Strangelove
Project Director
University of Ottawa
L. Gregory Bloomquist
Associate Director and
Managing Software Review Editor
Saint Paul University
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Michael T. Bradley
Lists in Review Supplement Managing Editor
Columbia University
Reinhard Pummer
Publications Review Editor
University of Ottawa
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Board of Advisors
Ann Okerson
Director, Association of Research Libraries
Office of Scientific and Academic Publishing
Sandra Woolfrey
Director, Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Michael Neuman
Director, Center for Text and Technology
Georgetown University
Larry Hurtado
Director, Institute for the Humanities
University of Manitoba
Robert Kraft
University of Pennsylvania
James O'Donnell
University of Pennsylvania
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Peter Scott
University of Saskatchewan
Jean-Claude Guedon
University of Montreal
David J. Reimer
Wilfrid Laurier University
Gord Nickerson
University of Western Ontario
Jim Marchand
University of Illinois
William Adler
North Carolina State University
Philip R. Davies
Editor, Sheffield Academic Press
Robin Cover
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Subscription Information
To subscribe to the Religious Studies Publication Journal - CONTENTS,
send the following e-mail message to
Listserv@Uottawa.bitnet or
Listserv@Acadvm1.Uottawa.CA
SUBSCRIBE CONTENTS your name
To determine the status of your subscription to CONTENTS, send the following
e-mail message to the above address:
QUERY CONTENTS
Contact the project director at
441495@Uottawa.bitnet or
441495@Acadvm1.Uottawa.CA
if you experience difficulty subscribing to CONTENTS.
The list will not be conversational. Frequency of postings will depend on
the number of cooperating publishers.
Sample CONTENTS Posting
(not including a review)
The following is a sample of how publication records will look when posted to
CONTENTS.
{BOOK IN SERIES}
[TITLE] Second Temple Studies: 1. Persian Period
[PUB LOCATION] Sheffield, England
[PUBLISHER] JSOT Press
[DATE] 1991
[ISBN] 1-85075-315-6
[SERIES TITLE] Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series
117 [EDITORS] Davies, Philip R.
[TABLE OF CON]
Abbreviations
List of Contributors
Sociology and the Second Temple
- Philip R. Davies................................................... 11
ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND SOCIETY
Temple and Society in Achaemenid Judah
- Joseph Blenkinsopp................................................. 22
The Achaemenid Context
- Kenneth Hoglund.................................................... 54
The Politics of Ezra:
Sociological Indicators of Postexilic Judaean Society
- Daniel L. Smith.................................................... 73
Reconstructing History from the Book of Ezra
Lester L. Grabbe..................................................... 98
LITERATURE AND SOCIETY
Textual Strategies and Ideology in the Second Temple Period -
Robert P. Carroll................................................... 108
The Temple in Persian Period Prophetic Texts
- David L. Petersen................................................. 125
CRITIQUE
Nehemiah 5: By way of a Response to Hoglund and Smith
- John H. Halligan.................................................. 146
On Models and Texts: A Response to Blenkinsopp and Petersen -
Peter Ross Bedford.................................................. 154
Empire, Temple and Community - But no Bourgeoisie!
A Response to Blenkinsopp and Petersen
- Richard A. Horsley................................................ 163
Texts and the World - An Unbridgeable Gap?
A Response to Carroll, Hoglund and Smith
- David Jobling..................................................... 175
Index of References
Index of Authors
[DESCRIPTION] This volume is a collection of essays that grew out of the
Society of Biblical Literature's "Sociology of the Second Temple
Consultation". Joseph Blenkinsopp's essay, "Temple and Society in Achaemenid
Judah" offers a critique of Joel Weinberg's `civic-temple community' theory
and concludes that the Babylonian immigrants that constituted Achaemenid
Judah imported and successfully imposed the social settings from their
Persian diaspora.
Kenneth Hoglund's essay, "The Achaemenid Context" investigates the
impact of Achaemenid imperial rule on the social constitution of the Judaean
postexilic community. The author suggests that the postexilic community's
ideology of ethnic separation resulted from an imperial mechanism of ethnic
collectivization that was promoted by imperial officials.
Daniel Smith's essay, "The Politics of Ezra: Sociological Indicators
of Postexilic Judaean Society" applies sociological and anthropological
analysis to textual and archaeological evidence from exilic and postexilic
sources. The postexilic community found itself involved in a class based
conflict that cannot be reduced to religion alone. Social boundaries were a
survival mechanism of an `exilic consciousness'.
Lester Grabbe's essay, "Reconstructing History from the Book of Ezra"
challenges the validity of a basic consensus on the authenticity of certain
sections of Ezra and Nehemiah. Grabbe calls for a re-evaluation of the
`Persian documents' of Ezra 1-7 and of the general reliability of Ezra for a
reconstruction of the history of Judah.
Robert Carroll's essay, "Textual Strategies and Ideology in the
Second Temple Period" demonstrates the social and ideological background of
certain Temple texts. His analysis uncovers, among other things, female
subversiveness' as a fundamental characteristic of biblical women. David
Petersen's essay, "The Temple in Persian Period Prophetic Texts" looks at the
significance of the temple within Persian period texts and investigates the
supposed incorporation of prophecy into the cult at this time.