The team consists of the PI, a PhD student, and several postdocs who conduct research in five different work packages focused on Hebrew Bible texts (WP1), reception of biblical narratives (WP2), Hellenistic Jewish novels (WP3), Jewish travel in the Greco-Roman world (WP4), and intersectional theorizing (WP5).
The PI Elisa Uusimäki works on all the work packages. Up until now, she has worked on WPs 1, 2, and 4. As a result, she has explored several aspects of travel in Hebrew Bible and ancient Judaism in four journal articles (1 published; 3 in press) and three book chapters (1 published; 1 in press; 1 under review). A great deal of her research revolves around the question of women's travel, and she is currently writing a monograph on the topic. In addition, Uusimäki's publications discuss travel from different angles, including plague-related (im)mobility, travel-related anxiety, travel's transformative effect, and intercultural contact. She has also published three articles that popularize the research conducted in ANINAN.
The PhD student Anat Shapiro has been working on her monograph, which explores freedom of movement in the book of Jonah (WP1), since Sept 2021. Shapiro was trained comparative literature in Tel Aviv and brings solid expertise in literary and narrative studies to the project. She is currently in the writing phase of her PhD project, and is expected to submit her dissertation in the second half of 2024.
Lasse Toft and Miriam DeCock joined ANINAN as postdocs for short periods of time in 2022. Both of them conducted research on reception history (WP2): DeCock co-authored an article on travel and pseudepigraphy with the PI, whilst Toft is working on the reception of Abraham's travel in late antiquity.
Postdoc Gillian Glass joined ANINAN in Jan 2023 and investigates Hellenistic Jewish literature in its wider Mediterranean context, as well as contributing to the synthesis part of the project (WPs 2, 3 and 5). She has published an article on Joseph and Aseneth (in press) and submitted another article on 2 Maccabees (under review). These publications pave way for Glass' key contributions to ANINAN: she is working on a series of articles related to travel's educational and gendered dimensions in early Jewish writings, exploring issues such as the expansion of biblical lore, the pursuit of knowledge, and the formative function of travel in Hellenistic Jewish novels.
Postdoc Eelco Glas has worked on early Jewish migrant authors in the Greco-Roman context (WP4) since Jan 2023. He has published a peer-reviewed article on movement in Josephus' Judean War (in press), three book reviews (published), and a popular article on Philo (in press), as well as co-authoring a handbook article on Josephus (in press). All of these publications prepare for Glas' key contributions to ANINAN: he is working on a series of articles related to the themes of travel, hospitality, migrant authorship, and diaspora in the texts of Josephus, Philo, and Paul.