Mroczek Wins DeLong Book History Prize
Eva Mroczek, assistant professor of religious studies at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, has been named the recipient of the 2017 DeLong prize for book history, for (Oxford University Press, May 2016).
鈥淏ook history has been an important intellectual framework for my work on the early history of now-Biblical texts,鈥 Mroczek said, 鈥渁nd I鈥檓 particularly proud of this recognition because no book on antiquity has ever received this prize before.鈥
The DeLong Book History Book Prize is administered by the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing, or SHARP, founded to create a global network for book historians working in a broad range of scholarly disciplines.
Claire Squires, SHARP鈥檚 director of publications and awards, said of The Literary Imagination in Jewish Antiquity: 鈥淒espite its impressive and wide-ranging scholarship, the book is deft of touch, enjoyable and accessible, and should be read by any scholar interested in the history of the Bible, early Jewish literature and the idea of the book.鈥
The Literary Imagination in Jewish Antiquity offers new ways to conceptualize how early Jews understood sacred writing before the concepts of 鈥淏ible鈥 and 鈥渂ook鈥 had emerged, treats early Jewish literary culture on its own terms, rather than as a precursor to later, normative Judaism and Christianity, and contributes a literary perspective to the texts of early Judaism.
Earlier this year the University of Heidelberg鈥檚 Research Center for International and Interdisciplinary Theology announced Mroczek as one of the recipients of the Manfred Lautenschlaeger Award for Theological Promise for The Literary Imagination in Jewish Antiquity.
Mroczek holds a Ph.D. in the study of religion from the University of Toronto, and her work on early Jewish literary culture has appeared in the Journal for the Study of Judaism and Journal of Ancient Judaism, as well as the SHARP journal Book History. She came to 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis in 2016.
She discusses her book in this from the Jean and Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan.