- The site of the conference
- The conference and its Oxford context Welcome message and introduction
- David, Orpheus, and Reception History
- Archaeological Approaches The Psalms and Qumran
- Psalm 145 - the missing nun
- Qumran Psalms - 7 more examples
- Qumran Examples - three similar scribal difference...
- Qumran Examples - the remaining 4
- Hermeneutical Approaches Medieval Answers to Modern Questions
- Ancient Near Eastern Approaches Psalm 104 and Akhenaten's Hymn to the Sun
- The Psalms and Sumerian Hymns
- Rhetorical Approaches Theodicy and the Psalms
- The Psalms and Christian Art Liturgical Psalters in Medieval Europe
- The Psalms and Jewish Art Chagall and Tudeley
- Modern Art in Interfaith Dialogue
- A Cantata of Psalms for the First Day of Sukkot The Music of the Bible
- Reception History Approaches The Reception of Psalm 137 in Jewish and Christian Tradition
- Continuing the exploration of Psalm 137 in Reception History
- Day 3 preview
- Redactional Approaches The Psalter as a Book
- Hebrew Text and Versions Translating the Psalms
- Translating
- My essay on Translating Biblical Poetry
- Abstracts of the Graduate Theses
- Summation Problems and Prospects in Psalmic Studies
For there is a language of flowers
for flowers are peculiarly, the poetry of Christ (Christopher Smart)
א ב ג ד ה ו ז ח ט י כ ל מ נ ס ע פ צ ק ר ש ת
Saturday, 2 October 2010
The Oxford Psalms Conference - in sequence
Here are the posts for the Oxford Conference on the Psalms from Sept 22-24, 2010 in the order the topics were presented. These are reconstructed from my notes, from handouts, and from pictures I have taken or from the web. If you find errors or can offer clarifications please feel free to comment or email me at bobmacdonald at gx dot ca and I will adjust or correct the post.
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