2023- 24 Seminar Dates and Speakers

FALL SEMESTER

Kallenberg

Vera Kallenberg, Duke University and Bielefeld University

  • September 10, 2023 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Vera Kallenberg, gives a paper entitled:  "I could relate most closely to the Black Experience": Jewish Experience, African American Women's history, and the Story of Gerda Lerner's Black Women in White America (1972).

Kallenberg is a Fulbright Scholar and historian working at the crossroads of Jewish studies, gender studies, North American studies, and European studies. Currently, she is a research associate [wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin] at the Interdisciplinary Center for Gender Research at Bielefeld University and a Postdoctoral Scholar in the Research Training Group "Experiencing Gender. Constitution and Transformation of Being-in-the-World" where she focuses on intersectionality, experience, and knowledge production in historical perspective. 

Vera received her PhD from the TU Darmstadt and the EHESS Paris in a binational German-French framework (Cotutelle) with a dissertation in history on Jews before the Frankfurt Criminal Court 1780-1814. Her German-language book, based on her dissertation, won the Arno Lustiger Prize as part of the 2019 Rosl and Paul Arnsberg Awards. Also based on this research, she recently published an article in Jewish Social Studies, "Jewishness, Gender, and Sexual Violence in Early Nineteenth-Century Frankfurt am Main: An Intersectional Microhistory" (JSS, 26, 2, Winter 2021). https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jewisocistud.26.2.04 

Vera is particularly concerned with the relationship between intersectional experience and knowledge production in 20th-century Jewish intellectual history, feminist historiography, and critical thought.  In collaboration with the department of contemporary history at Bielefeld University, she is currently working on the life and work of the pioneering women's historian Gerda Lerner (1920-2013).

Her current book project is entitled: "The Making of Women's Experience: Gerda Lerner In A Transnational History Perspective"

 

 

Shyovitz

David Shyovitz, Northwestern University

  • October 22, 2023; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

David Shyovitz (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 2011) is Associate Professor of History and Director of NU's Crown Family Center for Jewish and Israel Studies. His research focuses on medieval European intellectual and cultural history, with a particular emphasis on Jewish history and Jewish-Christian relations. He is the author of A Remembrance of His Wonders: Nature and the Supernatural in Medieval Ashkenaz (Philadelphia, 2017), which was awarded the John Nicholas Brown Prize for best first book in Medieval Studies by the Medieval Academy of America. His current book project, "O Beastly Jew!" Jews, Animals, and Jewish Animals in the Middle Ages, explores the overlapping ways in which Jewish and Christian authors and artists distinguished humans from animals, and Jews from Christians, over the course of the Middle Ages. 

 

 

Bashkin

Orit Bashkin, U. of Chicago

  • December 3, 2023; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Orit Baskin is a professor in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago. A historian working on the intellectual, social, and cultural history of the modern Middle East, she teaches courses on nationalism, colonialism and postcolonialism in the Middle East, on modern Islamic civilization, and on Israeli history. Her fields of expertise include Iraqi history and culture, Arab-Jewish history, Arab intellectual history, and Israeli history.  Her current research project explores the lives of Iraqi Jews in Israel.

Bashkin earned her PhD in Near Eastern studies from Princeton University. She has previously been a fellow at the Katz Center, and has also held fellowships at the National Forum on the Future of Liberal Education and at the Franke Institute for the Humanities at the University of Chicago.

Her publications include: "Impossible Exodus: Iraqi Jews in Israel" (Stanford University Press, 2017) and "New Babylonians: A History of Jews in Modern Iraq" (Stanford University Press, 2012)

 


SPRING SEMESTER 

 

Golberg

Sylvie Anne Goldberg, Center for Historical Research, L'École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris

  • January 28, 2024; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Sylvie Anne Goldberg is a professor at the Center for Historical Research, L'Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, where she heads the Jewish Studies Program. She is the author of several books, including Crossing the Jabbok: Illness and Death in Ashkenazi Judaism in Sixteenth- through Ninteenth-Century Prague and Clepsydra: Essay on the Plurality of Time in Judaism. Her most recent work, Transmitting Jewish History is a series of interviews with Scholar Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi that paint a revealing portrait of history and bring together exceptional material on Yerushalmi's personal and intellectual journeys.

 

 

 

Kaplan

Brett Ashley Kaplan, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

  • February 4, 2024; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Brett Ashley Kaplan received her Ph.D. from the Rhetoric Department at the University of California, Berkeley in 2002 and is now a Professor and Conrad Humanities Scholar in the Program in Comparative and World Literature at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign where she directs the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, Memory Studies. Her first books, Unwanted Beauty: Aesthetic Pleasure in Holocaust Representation (2007) and Landscapes of Holocaust Postmemory (2011), examine the Shoah’s intersections with art and space. Turning to race in art and literature, she has published Jewish Anxiety in the Novels of Philip Roth (2015)She is the editor of Critical Memory Studies: New Approaches (Bloomsbury, 2023) and co-editor (with Anthony Russell and Sara Feldman) of the collection in progress, Blewish: Contemporary Black-Jewish Voices. Her first novel, Rare Stuff was published by Spuyten Duyvil in 2022, and she is at work on a second novel, Vandervelde Downs. She teaches classes in Jewish American Literature in Dialogue with U.S. Minority Cultures, Literary Responses to the Holocaust, Introduction to Theory, Introduction to Holocaust, Genocide, Memory Studies, Memory and Objects, and single author/auteur classes on J.M. Coetzee, Philip Roth, Marguerite Duras and Alain Resnais.

 

Ben Yaakov

Reut Israela Ben-Yaakov, Duke University

  • March 24, 2024; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Reut Israela Ben-Yaakov is a Postdoctoral Associate in the Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at Duke University, and at the Duke Center for Jewish Studies. 

Before coming to Duke, Ben-Yaakov completed her PhD in the Department of Hebrew Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is a translator of fiction and poetry, and the editor of Tangier Publishing House’s translated poetry series.

 

 

 

Dahan

Henriette Dahan,  Ben Gurion University

  • April 7, 2024; 3:00 pm Eastern time (Hybrid)

Henriette Dahan  is an Israeli Senior Lecturer of political science and the founder of the Gender Studies Program at Ben Gurion University. She is one of the founders of the Mizrahi feminist movement, and one of the leading theorists of Mizrahi feminism.

She completed her bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the Hebrew University in the Department of Political Science.   Dahan is a researcher of political thought, feminist theory, the interplay between gender and politics, globalization and postcolonialism.  She founded and served as the head of the Gender Studies Program at Ben Gurion University and lectures at the Social and Economics College. She is a member of the National Press Council, the Public Committee for Education in Israel, served as an adviser to the IDF and the Municipality of Be'er Sheva on women's issues.

She is a member of the board of directors of the human rights organization B'Tselem, and on the steering committee of the Yitzhak Rabin Center for Israel Studies. She is a founder and executive committee member of the Alternative Information Center and a member of the board of the Mizrahi Democratic Rainbow Coalition.