Mark Bilby on the 2013 York Christian Apocrypha Symposium
Mark Bilby, administrator of the Voces anticae blog, offers his thoughts on the 2013 York Christian Apocrypha Symposium. Mark attended the event and contributed an excellent paper (“Backstories of the Bandits: The Emergence, Submersion and Re-emergence of the Cult of Dysmas”) on apocryphal traditions of the bandits crucified with Jesus. I hope to provide my own summary of the symposium some time in the next week.

Lily Vuong, "Ordinary or Extraordinary? The Reception of the Protevangelium of James in the History of the Blessed Virgin Mary"
Annette Yoshiko Reed, "The Afterlives of Christian Apocrypha”
Mary Dzon, “‘All the (Good) News That’s Fit to Print?’ Early Printings of Apocryphal Texts”
Nicola Denzey Lewis, "Nag Hammadi, Gnosticism, Apocrypha: Bridging Disciplinary Divides"
Jean-Michel Roessli, “North American Approaches to the Study of the Christian Apocrypha on the World Stage”
Stephen J. Patterson, “The Apocryphal Gospels and North American Historical Jesus Research”
Kristian S Heal,
Mark Glen Bilby, “Backstories of the Bandits: The Emergence, Submersion and Re-emergence of the Cult of Dysmas”
F. Stanley Jones, “
Stephen Shoemaker, “The Tiburtine Sibyl, the Last Emperor, and the Byzantine Apocalyptic Tradition”
Lorenzo DiTommaso is Professor and Chair of the Department of Religion at Concordia University in Montréal. He specialises in the study of apocalypticism, from the book of Daniel to contemporary popular culture. In the field of Christian Apocrypha, he has published several studies on late antique and mediaeval Christian apocalyptic literature and on the transmission of the ancient Jewish "pseudepigrapha" in Christian contexts. For the 2013 York Symposium, Professor DiTommaso will respond to the papers in the session on "New Frontiers in Christian Apocrypha Studies."