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About Jeremy Schott I am an interdisciplinary scholar of culture, literature, religion, and philosophy in the Roman and Byzantine world. My research has covered a broad range: the politics of religious and ethnic identity; the practice and theory of translation; historiography; the history of books and reading; and most recently, the ...
Associate Professor of Religious Studies, UNC-Charlotte (2011-2013) Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, UNC-Charlotte (2005-2011) PUBLICATIONS. Books . Schott, Jeremy M., Eusebius of Caesarea, The History of the Church: A New Translation. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2019.
Jeremy Schott. Professor, Religious Studies; Director, Medieval Studies Institute. Email: jmschott@indiana.edu. Department: Religious Studies; Borns Jewish Studies Program. Campus: IU Bloomington. Sycamore Hall, Rm. 209A.
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Ph.D., Duke University, 2005A, University of Rochester, 1999Religions of the Late Ancient and Early Medieval/Byzantine Mediterranean and Near EastCultural and Social History of Late Antiquity and the Later Roman EmpireContemporary Theory and the Study of PremodernityAncient Philosophy (esp. the Platonic tradition)Eusebius of Caesarea: Tradition and Innovations, Aaron Johnson and Jeremy Schott, (Harvard University Press/Center for Hellenic Studies, 2013). Christianity, Empire, and the Making of Religion in Late Antiquity, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008)
“Plotinus’ Portrait and Pamphilus’ Prison Notebook: Neoplatonic and Early Christian Textualties at the Turn of the Fourth Century C.E.,” Journal of Early Christian Studies,forthcoming Fall 2013. “Textuality and Territorialization: Eusebius’ Exegeses of Isaiah, and Empire,” Eusebius and the Construction of a Christian Culture,> Aaron Johnson and Jer...
Introduction to the New TestamentIntroduction to ChristianitySexuality and Gender in Early ChristianityPilgrims and Exiles: Late-ancient and early-medieval imaginings of travel, territory and identityAbout Jeremy Schott. My teaching and research lie at the intersections of Religious Studies, Ancient History, Classical Studies, Philosophy, and Literature. My courses focus on the cultural, social, and literary histories of religion and religions in the late-ancient and early medieval Mediterranean and Near East.
Jan 4, 2022 · Jeremy Schott’s translation is a remarkable work of scholarship. The translator manages to convey the idiosyncrasies and ancient conventions of Eusebius’ Greek palpable to English-speaking readers.
Department of Classical Studies. Adjunct faculty profile for Jeremy Schott.