This website uses cookies
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.
Biography
Jason Sion Mokhtarian is Herbert and Stephanie Neuman Associate Professor in Hebrew and Jewish Literature and Director of the Jewish Studies Program?at Cornell University. The son of Jewish emigrants from Tehran, Mokhtarian grew up in the suburbs of Chicago and studied at the University of Chicago before earning graduate degrees in Ancient Iranian studies and Late Antique Judaism from the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at UCLA. He was also a Lady Davis Research Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Mokhtarian is the author of two books and numerous articles, including in the journals Jewish Studies Quarterly, Harvard Theological Review, Iranian Studies, and Mizan: Journal for the Study of Muslim Societies and Civilizations. His first book, Rabbis, Sorcerers, Kings, and Priests: The Culture of the Talmud in Ancient Iran?(University of California Press, 2015), was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award in scholarship and recently translated into Persian. His second book, Medicine in the Talmud: Natural and Supernatural Therapies between Magic and Science?was published in 2022 (University of California Press). His current book project is on Judeo-Persian translations and commentaries of biblical and rabbinic sources. A 20,000-word chapter from this book entitled “A Judeo-Persian Translation of the Book of Esther (Bibliothèque nationale de France MS Hébreu 127)” is forthcoming.
In 2022, Mokhtarian convened an international workshop on Judeo-Persian Literature at the Intersection of Jewish Studies and Iranian Studies, and, in collaboration with Yale University’s Judaic Studies Program, co-organized a conference on The Aramaic Incantation Bowls in Their Late Antique Contexts.
Mokhtarian has co-edited multiple books and journals, including a forthcoming collection of essays on the corpus of magic bowls based on the Yale conference: The Aramaic Incantation Bowls in Their Late Antique Contexts (under contract, Brown Judaic Studies). As a member of the international research group PERSIAS (“Perception and Reception of Persia among Jews in Antiquity from Achaemenid to Sasanian times”), he is also co-editing a special edition of the Journal of Hebrew Scriptures on the topic of “Ancient Jewish Memories of Achaemenid Persia,” and in 2015 he co-edited a special edition of the journal Iranian Studies on the topic of “Religious Trends in Late Ancient and Early Islamic Iran.” Mokhtarian is also a series co-editor of the Olamot Book Series?(Indiana University Press), which translates innovative books by Israeli scholars on a range of topics in Jewish Studies. From 2018-2020, Mokhtarian served as the Director of the Olamot Center for Scholarly and Cultural Exchange in Indiana University’s Jewish Studies Program, where he taught for nearly a decade before coming to Cornell.
An award-winning instructor, Mokhtarian teaches a range of courses in both Jewish Studies and Iranian Studies and has advised undergraduate and graduate students at Cornell in various capacities.
Mokhtarian’s research interests include the Talmud in its Persian-Sasanian context, Iranian religions and languages, ancient Jewish magic and medicine, Judeo-Persian literature, and the history of the Jews of Persia. Research languages include Hebrew and Aramaic, as well as Old, Middle, and New Persian.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.