NOTE: Hebrew language courses are offered in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Languages and Literatures.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Ackerman.
07F, 08F: 10
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Benor.
Consult special listings
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: SOC; WCult: W. Heschel.
08W, 08X: 11
A continuation of Jewish Studies 10, but may be taken independently. This course provides a survey of Jewish history and culture from the European enlightenment to the establishment of the State of Israel. Dist: SOC; WCult: CI. Heschel.
08S, 09S: 10A
Dist: LIT; WCult: NW. Glinert.
08S: 12 09W: 10A
The content of Jewish American Literature reflects that of many literatures including the broad variety of historical, political, social, and cultural experiences that Jews from very different places and backgrounds have brought to the United States. The course introduces students to the central topics, motives, and literary strategies from the beginnings of a tangible Jewish American literature in the late nineteenth century to the present. Dist: LIT; WCult: CI. Milich.
09S: 11
This course will explore the literature of Jewish American women from the late nineteenth century to the present; topics for discussion will include feminism, sexuality, identity politics, activism, and literary transmission. Among the readings will be poetry, fiction, memoir, and essays by such writers as Lazarus, Antin, Yezierska, Stock, Stein, Olsen, Rukeyser, Paley, Ozick, Rich, Piercy, Levertov, Gluck, Goldstein, Wasserstein, Goodman, Klepfisz, Feinberg, Chernin.
Dist: LIT, WCult: CI. Zeiger.
07F: 10A
This course will look at the complex, rich tradition of Jewish artists as well as the history of representations of Jews in film. We will focus on American films and examine how Jews became American and how American culture became Jewish. Topics will include: the role of Jews in the creation of the product and myth of Hollywood, how anti-semetism shaped images of Jews in film, and how mainstream film has shaped contemporary Jewish identity. Dist: ART; WCult: W. Bronski.
09S: 2A
Glinert.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: LIT; WCult: W. Glinert.
08S: 2A
Midrash is the ancient Jewish term for Biblical interpre-tation. We examine how the Bible was interpreted by the Rabbis 1500 to 2000 years ago, at the crucial juncture in history when the Bible was being canonized in the form it now has. We focus on powerful motifs such as the Creation, the Flood, Jacob and the Angel, Joseph’s Dreams, and the Golden Calf, and view them through two prisms: through a wide range of ancient Midrashic texts themselves; and through one influential modern Jewish literary reading of the Midrashic themes of Genesis. Dist: LIT; WCult: NW. Glinert.
07F: 2A
Dist: LIT; WCult: NW. Glinert.
08F: 2A
Dist: LIT. Kritzman.
08W: 2A
Studying representations of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism in the arts, history, theology and racial discourse in nineteenth century Britain, France, and Germany, this course will examine the rise of Islamic and Judaic Studies and Orientalist themes in the arts, including poetry, novels, travel writing, and briefly, music and painting. Readings will include: Goethe, Flaubert, Eliot, Said, Behdad, Ben-Yosef, and others. Dist: LIT; WCult: CI. Heschel, McKee.
08W: 10A
WCult: W. Orleck.
Not offered in the period 07F through 09S
Dist: SOC; WCult: W. Heschel.
08W: 9L
Dist: LIT; WCult: CI. Kacandes, Quack.
09W: 12
The Greco-Roman era in the ancient Near East is crucial for understanding the evolution of Judaism and the emergence of Christianity. This course will examine the archeological, historical, and art historical evidence for the development of Judaism and Christianity beginning with the First Century B.C.E. Topics will include the study of Jerusalem and its Temple, the archeological evidence surrounding the life and death of Jesus, and the art and architecture of the first synagogues and churches. Dist: ART; WCult: W. Kangas.
08F: 2A
Dist: LIT; WCult: W. Glinert.
09S: 10A
This course will examine how Freud’s own writings, his biography, and his biographers have shaped the perceptions of psychoanalysis as a specifically Jewish theory and practice. Through a reading of Freud’s texts on gender, sexuality, and religion, we will trace the connections between psychoanalysis, Jewishness, and gender that have impacted theoretical discussion. We will explore critique, including Horney, Reich, and Marcuse, and recent debate on the status of Freud in the U.S. Dist: SOC; WCult: CI. Fuechtner.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S.
Dist: LIT; WCult: CI. Schweitzer.
07F: 10A
This course will examine the Arab-Israeli conflict as portrayed in both Arabic and Hebrew/Israeli literary traditions—poetry, short story, novellas, literary essays, personal accounts, and also film, looking at how adversaries portray each other, how mutual stereotypes are created and reinforced, and how the conflict has shaped the development of these respective literary and cinematic traditions in substantially different ways. Authors will include Kanafani, Yehoshus, Khalifeh, Oz, Sakakini and Habiby. Dist: INT; WCult: CI. Bardenstein.
08W: 2A
Ethnomusicology is the study of music-particularly that outside the Western classical tradition-in its social and cultural context. In 2008, the course focuses on the musical cultures of one large geographical area: the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia, where the interaction of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism has produced both convergence and contrast in the rich array of musical traditions shaped by the Abrahamic belief systems and the social practices that have emerged from them. No prerequisite. Dist: ART; WCult: NW. Levin, Seroussi.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Benor.
09W: 12
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Heschel.
08F: 12
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Benor.
07F: 12
Dist: TMV; WCult: W. Benor.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: LIT, WCult: W. Heschel.
Not offered in the period from 07F through 09S
Dist: SOC; WCult: W. Heschel.
07F: 2A
This course will examine memoirs and autobiographies from the Middle East, with emphasis on Palestinian and Israeli memoirs. We will examine the different modalities of autobiographical writing while analyzing the relationships and tensions between “the individual and the collective.” We will look at the ways that particular experiences and positionalities are viewed as delineating a collective and how they shape narration and representation in autobiographical forms. Authors include Oz, Said, Appelfeld, Be’er, Matalaon, Shehedeh, Aciman, Kashua and Sakakini. Dist: INT and LIT; WCult: CI. Bardenstein.
All terms: Arrange
This course offers qualified students of Jewish Studies the opportunity to pursue work on a topic of special interest through an individually designed program. Requires permission of the instructor and the Chair.