Forgotten diaspora: Jewish communities in West Africa and the making of the Atlantic World, by Peter Mark and José da Silva Horta
This book is currently on order for SOAS Library. Its focus is on two communities of Sephardic Jews who settled in Portudal and Joal in Senegambia in the early 17th century
Read a review by Dr. Tobias Green (Centre for West African Studies, University of Birmingham) from the H-Luso-Africa pages of the Humanities and Social Sciences Net online
Information about and resources for the religions collection at the Library of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

Tuesday, 31 May 2011
Monday, 23 May 2011
Jews and Christians in 5th and 6th century Arabia: book review
Professor Hagith Sivan of the Department of History, University of Kansas, writes about the collected 2008 conference proceedings published in Paris in 2010 as Juifs et chrétiens en Arabie aux Ve et VIe siècles: regards croisés sur les sources (edited by Joëlle Beaucamp, Françoise Briquel-Chatonnet and Christian Julien Robin)
Read her opinions in the Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Find this book in SOAS Library at QO296.396 / 750253
Read her opinions in the Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Find this book in SOAS Library at QO296.396 / 750253
Thursday, 19 May 2011
A qualification in secularism?
Colleges and universities have long offered degree courses in religious studies and theology, but now one college in the USA has moved to offer the first degree programme in secularism.
Pitzer College is "a small liberal arts institution" in Southern California and the course will comprise modules such as "God, Darwin and Design in America", "Anxiety in the Age of Reason" and "Bible as literature"
Read more in this online article from the New York Times
Pitzer College is "a small liberal arts institution" in Southern California and the course will comprise modules such as "God, Darwin and Design in America", "Anxiety in the Age of Reason" and "Bible as literature"
Read more in this online article from the New York Times
Tuesday, 26 April 2011
Prophets of the past: book review
Michael Brenner's "Prophets of the past: interpreters of Jewish history" (published in translation by Princeton University Press in 2010) is reviewed on Humanities and Social Sciences Net Online by Professor Moshe Rosman of the Department of Jewish History at Bar Ilan University.
Michael Brenner is Professor of Jewish History and Culture at the University of Munich. His book looks at Jewish historiography from the 18th century to the present
Find the book in SOAS Library at QO909 / 743994
Michael Brenner is Professor of Jewish History and Culture at the University of Munich. His book looks at Jewish historiography from the 18th century to the present
Find the book in SOAS Library at QO909 / 743994
Thursday, 14 April 2011
New open-access book on Christianity and Judaism in late antiquity
Heresy and identity in late Antiquity (ed. by Holger Zellentin & Eduard Iricinschi; Mohr Siebeck, 2008)
Available in full-text from GoogleBooks, this monograph explores "the ways in which late antique groups defined their own socio-political borders and created secure in-group identities by means of discourses on "heresy" and "heretics"'
This book will be of interest to people studying Orthodox Christianity, early Christianity and Jewish-Christian relations in late antiquity
The link will shortly be posted to the Library subject guide for Religions, under Electronic Publications
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
The Jews of Central Asia: history and cuisine
Online article from the Jerusalem Post in which chef Dennis Wasko explores the history of the Bukharian Jews of today's Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, including their cuisine.
A recipe for Bukharian Plov (a chicken and rice dish) is included!
A recipe for Bukharian Plov (a chicken and rice dish) is included!
Thursday, 7 April 2011
Oriental Orthodox church history : open-access texts via ...
The Goussen Library on Oriental church history was collected by Heinrich Goussen (d.1927) and has been the subject of a digitisation project by the Universität Bonn since 2007.
This open access collection comprises over 1,000 digitised documents and books dating from the 16th – 20th centuries in Western languages, and also in Syrian, Coptic, Ethiopian, Armenian and Georgian, among others.
Links to this resource will shortly be added to the Library subject guide for Religions, under Electronic Publications, and Individual Religions: Christianity
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