Women Scholar Bloggers

Women biblical scholars are on the web! Have you checked these out? Do you know of others?

Miryam Brand

Mette Bundvad

Jennifer Chiou

Krista Dalton (at Ancient Jew Review)

April DeConick

Wil Gafney

Sandra Glahn

Deidre Good

Jennifer Guo

Laura Hunt

Carmen Imes

Nyasha Junior

Karen R. Keen

Lyn M. Kidson

Lydia Lee

RJS (she is a scientist, but her writing intersects with Bible)

Roberta Mazza

Marg Mowczko

Laura Robinson (podcasts)

Mitzi Smith

Ekaterini G. Tsalampouni

Women Biblical Scholars

Old sites still up but not updated in a few years:

Julia M. O’Brien

Suzanne McCarthy (now deceased; blogged at BLT)

Judy Stack-Nelson

Celia Wolff

Kelly Wilson

See also the new Logia Resource Database of women scholars. Know of any women scholar bloggers not cited here? Post their links in the comment section.

Blogger Spotlight: Liv Ingeborg Lied on 4 Ezra

Blogger Spotlight is a feature on the Women Biblical Scholars site that highlights women scholars who have their own blogs. One of their posts is selected for republication here to draw awareness to their blog. Today’s Blogger Spotlight is on Dr. Liv Ingeborg Lied, professor of religious studies at MF Norwegian School of Theology. Check out her blog, Religion – Manuscripts -Media Culture , for more of her writing.

Two Forgotten Sources of 4 Ezra

By Liv Ingeborg Lied

In the last few years, I have mentioned on two occasions manuscript witnesses to 4 Ezra that have apparently been left out of scholarly discussions focusing on this writing. In this post, I propose two possible reasons for this omission, and discuss why these manuscript sources to 4 Ezra deserve our attention. My interest here is not the decisions made by individual scholars, but rather the assessment schemes embedded in philological paradigms and the structuring effects of disciplinary borders to research practices.

My first example, Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) Supplément turc 983, f 113/126, containing Syriac 4 Ezra 8:33-41a/8:41c-47, was discussed in the post “Recycling 4 Ezra” (12 February 2014) (here). As noted in that post, this single parchment leaf was published in 1993 by Bernard Outtier in the article, “Un fragment syriaque inédit de IV Esdras”. The leaf has been dated paleographically to the sixth century (Outtier) and also to the eighth to ninth centuries, by Franҫoise Briquel Chatonnet (“Manuscrits syriaque de la Bibliothèque nationale de France” […], 185). As I mentioned in the 2014 post, the fragment has played no role in the scholarly discussion of 4 Ezra.  More