Hello!

This is Joey Cross here. I am an American living in Berlin with my wife Theresa and our three kids, and am a philologist and scholar of ancient literature at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Welcome to my professional webpage! My current position is as a research fellow on the European Research Council-funded project From Texts to Literature: Demotic Egyptian Papyri and the Formation of the Hebrew Bible (DEMBIB) at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (PI Bernd U. Schipper); see the page for my project and subproject here, as well as my team member page. I trained as a biblical scholar (Hebrew Bible/Old Testament) and Egyptologist at the University of Chicago, Department of Near Eastern Languages, and received my PhD in 2022. My dissertation was entitled “The Poetics of Plot in the Egyptian and Judean Novella.” Prior to Chicago, I studied classics and theology.

My primary scholarly interest is the literature of storytelling, both its poetics and its socio-cultural setting. Currently, I am researching novellas in the Achaemenian and Hellenistic southeastern Mediterranean, especially Judean and Egyptian. More generally, I am interested in developing narratological and other critical approaches to storytelling literature from antiquity and beyond, and ultimately hope to contribute to new paradigms of understanding and interpreting the construction of fictional literature cross-culturally, situating such artistic activity on the threshold of oral folklore and textual scholarship. In support of this, I also actively engage in historicizing past literary criticism and histories of literature, especially in the disciplines of biblical studies and Egyptology, in the context of 18th-19th century (especially German) intellectual history, and in theoretical currents of the 20th century.

I am also interested in the interaction and parallels between Ancient Egyptian culture and Ancient Israel, the Hebrew Bible, and the ancient Levant: particularly, I am involved in furthering textual, philological, and interpretive work on the corpus of Northwest Semitic texts found in Egyptian inscriptions and documents, in elucidating Egyptian backgrounds and parallels in magical practice evidenced in the Hebrew Bible and early Jewish literature, especially in processes of textual transformation spanning praxis and reading, and, finally and most generally, in pursuing the comparative philology of the Egyptian and Northwest Semitic languages.

Previously, I was a Public Outreach and Content Specialist for the Education Department of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago from 2015-2020, where I taught continuing education courses, gave public lectures on the Ancient Near East throughout the Chicago area, and provided expertise for the museum’s docent program. Additionally, I conducted research for the Chicago Demotic Dictionary and for the Critical Editions for Digital Analysis and Research project at the Oriental Institute. From 2016-2018, I taught in the Writing Program at the University of Chicago and won the Karen Dinal Memorial Award. From 2018-2020, at the University of North Carolina Asheville, I taught Latin in the Dept. of Classics and The Ancient World in the Humanities Program.

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orc id: 0000-0002-3514-9732
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contact

Joseph Cross
Seminar für Altes Testament
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Theologische Fakultät
Unter den Linden 6
10099 Berlin DE
Office: Burgstraße 26, Rm. 429, 10178 Berlin
Email: josIeph.don'tcrwantspam! Sopleaseossleave @hu-bermelin.ealone!du