From Synagogue Furnishing to Media Event: The Magdala Ashlar

IF 0.1 0 ART
S. Fine
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

In memory of Alf Thomas Kraabel (1934–2016). For Kraabel’s contributions to the study of ancient Judaism, beginning with the Sardis synagogue, see A. Thomas Kraabel, J. Andrew Overman, and Robert S. MacLennan, Diaspora Jews and Judaism: Essays in Honor of, and in Dialogue with, A. Thomas Kraabel (Atlanta, 1992). Many thanks to R. Steven Notley and Peter Schertz for their many insights and for reading my manuscript, and to Aren Maier for drawing my attention to the souvenirs sold at Magdala. I also thank Mordechai Aviam, Donald Binder, Jordan Ryan, Rina Talgam, and Jürgen K. Zangenberg for sharing their work and thoughts with me. The anonymous peer reviews have been most helpful, and for that I am grateful. I also thank Father Eamon Kelly for his solicitousness toward me as I have come to understand the site. I first spoke about the Magdala synagogue and its ashlar at “Unearthing Magdala: Where History, Archaeology and Religious Traditions Meet,” a conference organized by the Center for the Study of Ancient Judaism and Christian Origins in Nyack Few periods in the history of Jewish art and visual culture evoke as wide an interest among the scholarly community and within the general public as Roman antiquity. Even the names given to this period reflect its significance: devout Christians refer to it as the “time of Jesus,” the “intertestamental,” and New Testament periods; classicists speak of the Roman Empire; and many Jews know it as the period of “The Second Temple, Mishnah, and Talmud.” Western culture harbors an interest in Jews, their texts and artifacts that is quite remarkable. Within the religious studies community, Jewish art and visual culture of this period is often perceived as an alternate window into the culture of this pivotal era – a direct link to “our” culture heroes unencumbered by later religious tradition and scribal influence.1 It is as a gateway to Jesus beyond the books to Jewish life beyond the Talmudic rabbis – sometimes called upon to affirm tradition, though more often to transform or subvert it. In modern Israel, the history and archaeology of this period are ever present, whether directly through archaeological discovery or more subtly through street names, the national “symbol,” the reproduction of ancient Jewish coins on modern currency and stamps, the subtle presence of mosaic art in modern and historic patterns in the public sphere, and particularly in the rhetoric of modern Israel as the fulfillment of “a hope two thousand years old” in both state and popular contexts.2 While the rhetoric of archaeology as Israel’s national pastime may have faded, each new discovery of an ancient synagogue, interesting coin, or even a glass fragment with the image of a menorah continues to be national and international news. Western society’s interest in Jewish visual culture in Roman antiquity is not satiated by the supply. Each new discovery is subject to far more scrutiny and interest than might be the case with a larger corpus of artifacts. Discoveries are often portrayed as windows through which to view the very different world views that feed and give sustenance to popular and scholarly approaches to the Jewish past – and particularly to Jewish visual culture. This essay focuses upon one of these discoveries, the so-called
从犹太教堂家具到媒体活动:抹大拉Ashlar
纪念阿尔夫·托马斯·克拉贝尔(1934–2016)。关于克拉贝尔对古代犹太教研究的贡献,从萨迪斯犹太教堂开始,见A.Thomas Kraabel、J.Andrew Overman和Robert s.MacLennan,《散居犹太人与犹太教:纪念A.Thomas Kraabel和与A.Thomas Krabel对话的随笔》(亚特兰大,1992年)。非常感谢R.Steven Notley和Peter Schertz对我的手稿的深刻见解和阅读,也感谢Enn Maier让我注意到在Magdala出售的纪念品。我也感谢Mordechai Aviam、Donald Binder、Jordan Ryan、Rina Talgam和Jürgen K.Zangenberg与我分享他们的工作和想法。匿名同行评审非常有帮助,对此我深表感谢。我也感谢Eamon Kelly神父对我的关心,因为我已经了解了这个网站。我在尼亚克古代犹太教和基督教起源研究中心组织的一次会议“发掘马格达拉:历史、考古和宗教传统交汇之地”上首次谈到了马格达拉犹太教堂及其圣坛。在犹太艺术和视觉文化史上,很少有时期能像罗马人一样引起学术界和公众的广泛兴趣古代甚至这个时期的名字也反映了它的意义:虔诚的基督徒称之为“耶稣时代”、“互文期”和《新约》时期;古典主义者谈论罗马帝国;许多犹太人都知道这是“第二圣殿、米什纳和塔木德”时期。西方文化对犹太人及其文本和文物怀有浓厚的兴趣,这是非常了不起的。在宗教研究界,这一时期的犹太艺术和视觉文化通常被视为了解这个关键时代文化的另一扇窗户,与“我们”的文化英雄直接相连,不受后来宗教传统和涂鸦的影响,在现代以色列,这一时期的历史和考古一直存在,无论是直接通过考古发现,还是更巧妙地通过街道名称、国家“象征”、在现代货币和邮票上复制古代犹太硬币、公共领域现代和历史图案中镶嵌艺术的微妙存在,尤其是在现代以色列的修辞中,它在国家和大众背景下实现了“两千年前的希望”。2虽然考古学作为以色列的民族消遣的修辞可能已经消退,但每一次新发现的古代犹太教堂、有趣的硬币,甚至是一块有烛台图像的玻璃碎片,仍然是国家和国际新闻。西方社会对罗马古代犹太视觉文化的兴趣并没有被这种供给所满足。每一个新发现都会受到比大量文物更多的审查和关注。这些发现往往被描绘成一扇窗户,通过它可以看到截然不同的世界观,这些世界观为了解犹太历史,尤其是犹太视觉文化的流行和学术方法提供了素材和支撑。这篇文章聚焦于其中一个发现,即所谓的
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