ABSTRACT

In recent years scholars have re-evaluated the "parting of the ways" between Judaism and Christianity, reaching new understandings of the ways shared origins gave way to two distinct and sometimes inimical religious traditions. But this has been a profoundly textual task, relying on the writings of rabbis, bishops, and other text-producing elites to map the terrain of the "parting." This book takes up the question of the divergence of Judaism and Christianity in terms of material--the stuff made, used, and left behind by the persons that lived in and between these religions as they were developing. Considering the glass, clay, stone, paint, vellum, and papyrus of ancient Jews and Christians, this book maps the "parting" in new ways, and argues for a greater role for material and materialism in our reconstructions of the past. 

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

The geographies of identity

chapter 1|16 pages

Mountains, valleys, and stones

chapter 2|13 pages

Mountains

The construction of world religions

chapter 3|22 pages

Valleys

Intersectional, material antiquity

chapter 4|16 pages

Glass

The identities of things

chapter 5|16 pages

Clay

The economics of belonging

chapter 6|18 pages

Marble

Stories in stone

chapter 7|16 pages

Paint

The hollowness of symbols

chapter 8|15 pages

Vellum

“Relations” in miniature

chapter 9|17 pages

Papyrus

The practice of text

chapter 10|6 pages

The mountains from the valley