CREOR - Women in the Ancient World
Women in the Ancient World
CREOR Lunch Lecture Series 2018-2019
This Thursday lunch lecture series focuses on women in the ancient world. How did women live 1500-3000 ago, what did they feel, think and believe in, what did they produce and achieve? Recent research has uncovered many hidden treasures about the world in which women lived and were part of, from ancient Egypt and Babylonia to ancient Israel and Early Judaism, from the Greco-Roman world and Early Christianity to Byzantium and early Islam, of which much is now accessible through ancient writings, art and archeology. Join our lecture series with informative and exciting presentations, images never seen before, and a light lunch and fellowship with graduate students and faculty. Topics will include women in the Ancient Near East, Women in Ancient Israel, women in Early Judaism, women in the Greco-Roman World, women in early Christianity, women in Rabbinic Judaism, and women in Byzantium.
This lecture series is organized by McGill’s Centre for Research on Religion, the Montreal Biblical Colloquium, the School of Religious Studies and the Department of History and Classics.
Audience: Members of the McGill Center for Research on Religion, students and faculty of the School of Religious Studies, the Department of History and Classical Studies, the Montreal School of Theology, MORSL, interested lay people.
Date & Location
Birks Heritage Chapel and Senior Common Room 100, 3520 University Street, Montreal
Thursdays from 11:30-13:30, 2018-2019
ANNE LETROURNEAU
Professor Letourneau has a PhD in Religious Studies (Biblical Studies) with a concentration in Feminist Studies from the Université du Québec à Montréal. From 2015 to 2017, she conducted postdoctoral research at the Temple University (Philadelphia) Department of Religion. Her specialty is the exegesis of the Hebrew Bible. In her research and teaching, she is interested in the religious, literary and historical meanings of biblical texts as well as the history of their effects, especially on women and other marginalized groups.