New Archaeological Journal from Penn State

http://www.psupress.org/journals/jnls_JEMAHS.html

Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies Covers

Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies

    • Ann E. Killebrew
    • Sandra A. Scham
    • Quarterly Publication
    • ISSN 2166-3548
    • E-ISSN 2166-3556

Click here for a look at the lead article from the inaugural issue, ‘Preserving Petra Sustainably (One Step at a Time)’!

Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology Heritage Studies (JEMAHS) is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to traditional, anthropological, social, and applied archaeologies of the Eastern Mediterranean, encompassing both prehistoric and historic periods. The journal’s geographic range spans three continents and brings together, as no academic periodical has done before, the archaeologies of Greece and the Aegean, Anatolia, the Levant, Cyprus, Egypt and North Africa.

As the publication will not be identified with any particular archaeological discipline, the editors invite articles from all varieties of professionals who work on the past cultures of the modern countries bordering the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Similarly, a broad range of topics are covered, including, but by no means limited to:

  • Excavation and survey field results;
  • Landscape archaeology and GIS;
  • Underwater archaeology;
  • Archaeological sciences and archaeometry;
  • Material culture studies;
  • Ethnoarchaeology;
  • Social archaeology;
  • Conservation and heritage studies;
  • Cultural heritage management;
  • Sustainable tourism development: and
  • New technologies/virtual reality.

Appearing four times a year in February, May, August, and November, the journal will engage with professionals and scholars of archaeology and heritage studies as well as non-practitioners and students, both graduate and undergraduate.

In addition to combining traditional and theoretical archaeological data and interpretation, the Journal’s articles may range from early to prehistory to recent historical time periods. It also aims to publish accessible, jargon-free, readable, color-illustrated articles that will be informative for professional and non-professional readers. The journal does not publish unprovenanced artifacts purchased on the antiquities market or objects from private collections.

Editors
Ann E. Killebrew, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park (USA)
Sandra A. Scham, University of Maryland, College Park (USA)

Assistant Editors
Justin Lev-Tov, Statistical Research, Inc. (USA)
Louise A. Hitchcock, University of Melbourne (Australia)

Book Review Editor
Brandon R. Olson, Boston University (USA)

Editorial Assistant
Heather Heidrich, The Pennsylvania State University (USA)

Editorial and Advisory Board
Lorenzo d’Alfonso, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University (USA)
Jere L. Bacharach, University of Washington (USA)
Hanan Charaf, University of Paris I-Sorbonne (France)
Yiorgos Chrysanthou, University of Cyprus (Cyprus)
Eric H. Cline, George Washington University (USA)
Elif Denel, American Research Institute in Turkey, Ankara (Turkey)
Hermann Genz, American University of Beirut (Lebanon)
Ioannis Georganas, Independent Researcher (Greece)
Matthew Harpster, Institute of Nautical Archaeology, Bodrum (Turkey)
Kenneth G. Holum, University of Maryland at College Park (USA)
Morag Kersel, DePaul University (USA)
Saleh Lamei, D.G. Centre for Conservation of Islamic Architectural Heritage – CIAH (Egypt)
Mark Leone, University of Maryland at College Park (USA)
Thomas E. Levy, University of California at San Diego (USA)
Lynn Meskell, Stanford University (USA)
Mirko Novák, University of Bern (Switzerland)
Mark Munn, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park (USA)
Shelley-Anne Peleg, Israel Antiquities Authority (Israel)
Issa Jubrael Sarie, Al-Quds University (Jerusalem)
Neil A. Silberman, University of Massachusetts Amherst (USA)
Stuart Tyson Smith, University of California at Santa Barbara (USA)
Sharon R. Steadman, SUNY Cortland (USA)
Margreet Steiner, Independent Scholar (Netherlands)
Christopher A. Tuttle, American Center of Oriental Research (Jordan)
Stephen Weiner, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel)
James M. Weinstein, Cornell University (USA)
Donald Whitcomb, University of Chicago (USA)
Tony J. Wilkinson, Durham University (United Kingdom)

Footnote 9 — Twenty-year-old conversation

Footnote 9 – Richard John Neuhaus, ed. Theological Education and Moral Formation (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1992), pp. 211-213.

Richard John Neuhaus (1936-2009) was editor of the conservative journal First Things, as well as the Encounter Series of volumes published by Eerdmans, of which this source is volume 15. Readers of these Foootnotes might also be interested in other volumes in the series, particularly volume 2 (Unsecular America) and volume 5 (The Bible, Politics, and Democracy).Typically, each volume reports a conference in which four to six featured speakers delivered prepared addresses, following which those speakers and perhaps a dozen others join in a panel discussion of the issues raised in the prepared speeches.

This particular volume reports a conference at Duke University and offers some rare insight into the state of the denominational mentality in America, and I offer excerpts from three different sections of the round-table discussion for your amazement.

George Marsden, then Professor of the History of Christianity in America at Duke University Divinity School (later moving to Notre Dame), and author of Fundamentalism in American Culture and Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism in America, speaking of the crisis of authority in many American seminaries today:

George Marsden: “What we need to do,” he said, “is to go back to Christianity. We should start talking about God and the authority of the Bible. We should pray and teach the liturgy. But in most Protestant seminaries, if we went back to that kind of Christianity and came out with it as authoritative, we’d get kicked out. You might be able to get away with it at Duke because of its traditionalist ethos.”

“Is Duke really that different than, say, Union in New York?” Neuhaus asked the group.

Geoffrey Wainwright took up the question: “While teaching at Union in New York, I always felt that the assumption was that Christianity was wrong unless it could be shown to be right. At Duke the assumption is that, on the whole, Christianity is the agreed-upon basic, though there are problems here and there that can be debated.”

“At what point would you get kicked out of the University of Chicago Divinity School for authoritatively teaching orthodox Christianity?” Neuhaus asked.

“When you offended the feminists or the relativists or the gay caucus,” Marsden answered.

“How might you offend the relativists at Chicago?” Neuhaus probed.

Marsden replied, “By implying that Christianity is a religion that has some exclusivism. By implying that relativists weren’t Christians. After all, if you’re talking about traditional Christianity, you’re going to have to isolate and argue against ways of believing that are different from traditional Christianity.”

“George, you’re saying that there is a normative Christianity,” Neuhaus observed. “For example, if someone doesn’t believe in the resurrection of Christ, then he or she isn’t a classical Christian.”

“Yes, and if you say certain people aren’t Christians, you’ll get booted out,” Marsden responded.

“Do you really mean you’d get fired from the faculty?” Richard Hays asked with a note of disbelief.

“Well, you’d get hooted down and eventually called a crank,” guessed Marsden.

“I question that,” said Hays. “I think we’ve allowed ourselves to get buffaloed, to be intimidated into thinking that we could never say anything like that.”

Then Neuhaus continued his line of questioning. “How much could be changed if seminary professors taught more confessionally?”

Marsden attempted an answer. “In today’s seminaries you have pluralistic institutions, and you have to be careful about whom you offend. if you go into a seminary classroom and say, ‘Your problem is that you need to be converted,’ what you’re saying is that some people there aren’t Christians. That might not be an appropriate thing to say in a school that isn’t restricted to one denomination.”

Neuhaus wasn’t so sure. “In a theological faculty,” he said, “it should be inescapable that at some point you’re going to be teaching about the idea of conversion. If you make it clear that your understanding of conversion is that it is constitutive of being a Christian, you’re not browbeating the class. You’re simply making clear what your understanding of the Christian life is. And that includes conversion, in the born-again sense and/or in the baptismal-renewal sense. You wouldn’t be a good teacher of the church if you didn’t teach that.”

From Truth Magazine  XXXVI: 17 (September 3, 1992)

Footnote 7 – Menand, The Marketplace of Ideas

Footnote 7 – Louis Menand, The Marketplace of Ideas: Reform and Resistance in the American University  (New York: W.W. Norton, 2010), pp. 132-136, 154-155.

“The claim by conservatives that the academy is under the control of a left-wing professoriate is an old one, and studies since the fifties had tended to confirm the general suspicion that professors, as a group, are more liberal than the general public. In 1952, for example, social science professors voted for Adlai Stevenson over Dwight Eisenhower in the presidential election by a margin of 58 percent to 30 percent, even though Eisenhower (who, when he ran for office, was the president of Columbia University) won the election by almost 11 percentage points….

“In 2007, two sociologists working at Harvard and George Mason, Neil Gross and Solon Simons, conducted a national survey of the political views of the professoriate that observed all the protocols of scientific research and that has a good claim to being an accurate statistical picture of the 630,000 full-time professors, at every level of institution, from research universities to community colleges, in the United States at the time….The results of the survey are quite stunning.

“Gross and Simmons found that younger professors today tend to be more moderate in their political views than older professors, supporting the theory that the generation that entered the professoriate in the sixties was a spike on the chart ideologically. They also found, however, that the younger professors are more liberal in their social views. But the most important finding of the survey, they say, is that a large plurality of professors holds a center-left politics….

“What is striking about these results is not the finding that professors tend to be mainstream liberals.  It is the finding that they tend to be so overwhelmingly mainstream liberals. These are the data: [Table] … 44.1 percent of professors are liberal and 9.2 percent are conservative.  By contrast, in the public opinion poll closest to the time of the survey, the American public as a whole reported itself to be 23.3 percent liberal and 31.9 percent conservative.

“….It is unlikely that the opinions of the professoriate will ever be a true reflection of the opinions of the public; and, in any case, that would be in itself an unworthy goal.  Fostering a greater diversity of views within the professoriate is a worthy goal, however.  Professors tend increasingly to think alike because the profession is increasingly self-selected.  The university may not explicitly require conformity on more than scholarly matters, but the existing system implicitly demands and constructs it.”

Louis Menand is Ann T. and Robert M. Bass Professor English at Harvard University.  His book, The Metaphysical Club, wone the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for History. He has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 2001.   As with many of the quotations selected for inclusion (and sometimes commentary) on this blog, one should understand that there is often more nuanced discussion of the point at hand in the text preceding and following what is quoted here.  These are designed to steer interested readers to those discussions – that is all!