Readers may have heard that CSNTM is hosting its inaugural Text & Manuscript Conference May 19-20, 2022. The theme is Pen, Print, & Pixels and will feature plenary presentations throughout each day with optional breakout sessions. Full schedule and registration are at conference.csntm.org.
Plenary Speakers
- Hugh Houghton, “The Importance of Catena Manuscripts of the Greek New Testament”
- Dirk Jongkind, “On Singular Readings and Knowing When the Time Has Come for Better Tools”
- Jan Krans, “New Testament Conjectural Emendation: Folly or Duty?”
- Holger Strutwolf, “The ECM of Mark: Philology in the Digital Era”
- Kathleen Maxwell, “From the Coronis to the Blütenblattstil: The Decoration of the Greek Gospel Book”
Breakouts
- Juan Hernández, “The Significance of the Corrections of the Apocalypse in Codex Sinaiticus”
- Timothy Mitchell, “Exposing Textual Corruption in the Wider Circulation of the New Testament Writings During the Greco-Roman Era”
- Peter Montoro, “Two Way Traffic on the Transmissional Highway? Considering Chrysostom’s Exegesis as an Explanation for the Reading of GA 104 in Romans 2:26”
- Ryan Giffin, “Philippians in P46: Interesting Departures from the Standard Critical Text”
- Craig Evans, “How Long did the NT Autographs Survive? A Review of the Evidence”
- Christian Askeland, “Digital Images, Ancient Manuscripts, and Intellectual Property”
- Jeremiah Coogan, “Marginal Matthew: τὸ ἰουδαϊκόν in Medieval Manuscripts and Modern Editions”
- Edgar Ebojo, “‘Now the end is near’: Pen and Phenomena at the Line-ends of P46”
- Keith Elliott, “The Editio Critica Maior of Mark: Translation from German into English”
- William Warren, “From Ink to Exegesis: The Importance of Non-original Variant Readings”
- Grant Edwards, “Between Codex and Colophon: Ancient Book Format and the Limitations of Paleography”
- James Prothro, “A Theology of Textual Criticism? Searching for a Framework”
- Georgi Parpulov, “Levels of Style in Byzantine Calligraphy”
- Peter Gurry, “Textual Criticism in Early Protestant Bibles”