Otto, Jennifer

Faculty

History and Religion Department

Phone
(403) 329-2547
Email
jennifer.otto@uleth.ca

Office Hours

Mondays and Tuesdays: 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM

About Me

Jennifer Otto is Associate Professor in the Department of History and Religion at the University of Lethbridge, where she teaches courses on Christianity, Bible, and Western Religions.

Biography

BA, University of King's College (2006)
MA, McGill (2009)
PhD, McGill (2014)

Jennifer Otto's research and teaching explore how Christians remember and re-tell stories about their past, and how these memories and re-tellings shape self-understanding in the present. She is the author of Philo of Alexandria and the Construction of Jewishness in Early Christian Writings (Oxford University Press, 2018).

After graduating with a BA (Hons.) from the University of King's College in Halifax, NS, she earned her MA and PhD in Religious Studies at McGill University, where she held a Vanier Canada Graduate Fellowship. From 2015-2017, Dr. Otto was a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Erfurt in Erfurt, Germany, before joining the University of Lethbridge in 2018.

Dr. Otto's current research project, "Remembering Anabaptist Martyrs", investigates the reception and representation of early Christian martyrs among Anabaptists in the 16th century and in the present day. The project is funded by a SSHRC Insight Development Grant.

Publications

Philo of Alexandria and the Construction of Jewishness in Early Christian Writings (Oxford: OUP, 2018)

"We Slay Demons: Moral Progress and Origen's Pacifism." Church History 92 (2023)

"Anabaptists and the Apocalypse: The Makings of a Cosmic War in Münster." Pages 36-54 in Religion and Violence in Western Traditions: Selected Texts. Edited by Gerbern Oegema, Jennifer Guyver, and Andre Gangé (Abingdon: Routledge, 2021).

"Making Martyrs Mennonite" in Desiring Martyrs: Locating Martyrs in Space and Time (De Gruyter, 2020).

"Were the Early Christians Pacifists? Does it Matter?" The Conrad Grebel Review 35t(2017).

"The Church that Never Fell: Reconsidering the Mennonite narrative of the Church, 100-400CE." Mennonite Quarterly Review 91 (2017): 37-70.

Research Interests

Social history of early Christianity; Biblical interpretation; Christianity and violence; Historiography in the Radical Reformation; Christian pacifism