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Assistant Professor (Program Sessional), Jewish Studies & Faculty of Theology

Peter Sabo, PhD
My primary research focus is literary and cultural approaches to the Hebrew Bible. This involves reading the Hebrew Bible as a literary text using insight from critical theory, particularly deconstructionist, postcolonial, and feminist theory.

My primary research focus is literary and cultural approaches to the Hebrew Bible. This involves reading the Hebrew Bible as a literary text using insight from critical theory, particularly deconstructionist, postcolonial, and feminist theory. A secondary research topic is biblical reception history, with a focus on how the Hebrew Bible is used in contemporary literature and popular culture. A third area of research is method and theory in the study of religion.

My current book project, Familiar Otherness: Lot, His Daughters, and Their Descendants in the Hebrew Bible (under review with Bloomsbury T & T Clark, LHB/OTS series), explores the multifaceted way that Moab and Ammon (neighbouring states to ancient Israel) are constructed in the Hebrew Bible. I am also working on a new book tentatively titled Animals and Blood in Ancient Israel. This is an interdisciplinary work—informed by research in Biblical Studies, Jewish Studies, Relgious Studies, Animal Studies, and Gender Studies—that explores human/animal relationships in ancient Israel, focusing on the importance of blood in the ways ancient Israelites ate and sacrificed animals.

In addition to my work on literary and cultural approaches to the Hebrew Bible, I have research interests and publications in the areas of biblical reception history and method/theory in the study of religion. An example of my research in biblical reception history is my latest co-edited volume, Who Knows What We’d Make Of It, If We Ever Got Our Hands On It?”: The Bible and Margaret Atwood (2020), which assembles cutting edge literary and critical readings of the role of the Bible, and religion more generally, in the work of Margaret Atwood. “Who Knows What We’d Make Of It” won the Margaret Atwood Society Prize for Best Edited Volume. An example of my work in the area of method/theory in religious studies is my co-authored (with Dr. Pat Hart) publication, “Theorizing ‘Religion’ in Canadian Law.” This article examines and critiques the Supreme Court of Canada’s definition of religion in Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem ([2004] 2 SCR 551) as well as the continuing impacts this definition of religion has had on Supreme Court cases on the topic of freedom of religion.

At Huron, I teach courses in Jewish Studies, Religious Studies, and Global Great Books. A sampling of courses I have taught include Modern Jewish Thought (JS 1250), Introduction to Biblical Hebrew (HEBR 1040/1041), Understanding Religion (RS 1030), Money and Meaning (RS 2110), Scriptural Foundations of Social Justice (BS 5192), and Reason and Revelation (GGB 3001).

 

Selected Publications

“Who Knows What We’d Make of It, If We Ever Got our Hands on It?”: The Bible and Margaret Atwood. Piscataway: Gorgias Press. Edited with Rhiannon Graybill. 2020

Tzedek, Tzedek Tirdof: Poetry, Prophecy, and Justice in Hebrew Scripture: Essays in Honour of Francis Landy on the Occasion of his 70th Birthday. Boston: Brill. Edited with Andrew Gow. 2018

“Theorizing ‘Religion’ in Canadian Law.” With Patrick Hart. Studies in Religion / Sciences Religeuses. Early online publication (https://doi.org/10.1177/00084298231209985). 2023

“Exploring the Human and Animal Relationship in the Hebrew Bible Through the Blood Prohibition.”  Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 90.1 (2022): 150-75. (https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/lfac001)

“Testifying Bodies: The Bible and Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments.” With Rhiannon Graybill. Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 38.1 (2022): 131-47. (https://doi.org/10.2979/jfemistudreli.38.1.24)

“The Monstrous-Feminine, The Abject, and the Book of Lamentations.” The Bible and Critical Theory. 16.1 (2020): 1-17.

“Moabite Women, Transjordanian Women, and Incest and Exogamy: The Gendered Dimensions of  Boundaries in the Hebrew Bible.” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. 45.1 (2020): 93- 110. (https://doi.org/10.1177/0309089219862807)