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Department of Jewish Studies
Jewish Studies at Rutgers - Bildner Center and Dept. of Jewish Studies

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Department of Jewish Studies

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Mini-Courses

Ancient Egypt (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:266
  • Semester(s) Offered: Fall
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Cross-Listed Departments:

    Department: African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian Languages and Literatures, Course Number: 01:013:302

  • Course Type: Mini-Course

Ancient EgyptIntroduction into ancient Egypt. Topics include a historical overview, religion, art, archaeology, interconnections between ancient Egypt and ancient Israel, and Hieroglyphic Egyptian language and literature.

Anne Frank: Her Life, Diary, and Legacy (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:381
  • Semester(s) Offered: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

Anne FrankHow did Anne Frank become the most famous victim of the Holocaust? And how did her diary become one of the most widely read books of all time? This 1.5 credit minicourse will examine the writing and publishing of Anne Frank’s diary and then explore her remarkable legacy on stage, in museums, and through works of video, music, and art.
No prerequisites. All readings in English.

Binding of Isaac (mini-course)

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

TOPICS COURSEEnglish Course

This course offers a close study of the biblical story of the Binding of Isaac and the later development of the biblical story. Our course is completely online, in keeping with the public health concerns surrounding the coronavirus. Along with the obvious health issues, this situation means we are all adjusting to new situations in our personal lives and in our classroom, so I urge everyone to communicate with me if you are experiencing difficulty either with the material/format of the class or with life outside the classroom.

Holocaust Life Stories

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

HolocaustmemoryTOPICS COURSE

This 1.5-credit course examines different ways that Holocaust survivors have told their life stories, or have had their stories told by others, in various media, from the immediate postwar years to the early 21st century.  Examples include works of visual art, film, graphic novel, and video.

If you have any questions about the course, please contact Prof. Shandler at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Note: This course is not open to senior citizen auditors.

Holocaust Memory

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

HolocaustmemoryTOPICS COURSE

This course examines different ways that the Holocaust has been recalled, from the immediate postwar years to the present, in film, television, visual art, audio and video recordings, monuments, and museums.

If you have any questions about the course, please contact Prof. Shandler at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Note: This course is not open to senior citizen auditors.

Jewish Historical Fiction (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:336
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

The World To Come by Dara HornThis course will explore the genre of Jewish historical fiction and its relationship to the historical periods the novels purport to represent, starting from the medieval period and continuing into contemporary times. The course will investigate the differences and similarities between two kinds of writing: historical and fictional narrative. Readings will include primary and secondary historical sources, as well as several novels. Topics to be covered include: Medieval Jewish life--particularly marriage, sexuality, and economics; mysticism and heretical Sabbatianism; revolution and art in the Soviet Union.

Jewish Messiahs (mini-course)

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

TOPICS COURSEMessiah Course

The course examines the concept of the messiah from its biblical roots through various historical figures identified as Jewish messiahs. These include Jesus of Nazareth, Shimon bar Kokhba, Shabbtai Zevi, and Menahem Mendel Schneerson, as well as messianic elements in Zionism. No prior knowledge is required or assumed.

Jews and Medicine

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

JewsandMedicineTOPICS COURSE

Course Description: This course will thematically explore the engagement of Jews with medicine, public health, and bioethics. Over the course of the semester we will look at the ways that Jews imagined health, illness, and the body, as well as the way that non-Jews imagined the Jewish body and health. Of particular interest are those moments and places where ideas of Jewishness, and Judaism are relevant to the question of medicine, conceptualizations of health and wellness, nutrition, and the idea of the Jewish body.

Some of the topics to be explored are Jewish folk medicine, Jewish involvement in tenement reform, race science, and Jewish responses to bioethics questions such as abortion and euthanasia.

Modern Jewish Politics

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

TOPICS COURSEModern Jewish Politics

This mini-course will examine the political relationship of the Jewish community to the gentile authorities among whom they lived (and live), to the internal authority structures within the Jewish community, and to the modern Jewish state. We will examine how Jews rebelled against and accommodated to structures of power in varying historical contexts. Topics to be discussed include: The Birth of Modern Jewish Politics; The Russian State and the Jews (conscription, revolution, and liberalism); Communism and Socialism in the Interwar Years; Jewish Liberalism and its Discontents; Zionist Empowerment; and the challenge of the Holocaust. Primary and secondary sources, as well as fiction, poetry and films, will be used.

No prerequisites. 

Springsteen and the Bible (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:381
  • Semester(s) Offered: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

springsteen and the bibleBruce Springsteen’s words and music have been part of the American landscape for nearly half a century. Throughout this period, biblical and religious themes have played an important role in his lyrics. This course will examine the shifting roles the Bible has played in Springsteen’s writing at different points in his life, and the sophisticated ways he has engaged the Bible. Special attention will be paid to key terms such as: Sin, Grace, and the Struggle Within. No prerequisites. The course is open to fans and non-fans alike.

Professor: Azzan Yadin-Israel
Monday/Thursday 10:20-11:40
116 Miller Hall, College Avenue Campus

The Art of Genesis (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:382
  • Semester(s) Offered: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

the art of genesisThis minicourse explores the ways in which artists have engaged three key stories in the biblical Book of Genesis: Adam and Eve’s sin (The Fall of Man), Noah’s Ark, and The Binding of Isaac. Although artwork is generally valued for its aesthetic beauty, the course focuses on the ways in which select works interpret the biblical stories they illustrate.

Professor: Azzan Yadin-Israel
Monday/Thursday 12:10-1:30
116 Miller Hall, College Avenue Campus

Women in the Bible (mini-course)

  • Course Code: 01:563:265
  • Semester(s) Offered: Fall
  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

BibleIintroThe role of women in the Jewish Bible/Old Testament stories; also addresses the question of the role of women in ancient Israelite society.

Zionist Idea

  • Credits: 1.5
  • Course Type: Mini-Course

ZionismTOPICS COURSE

No movement in modern Jewish history has had a greater impact on Jewish life than Zionism. This course examines the origins of Zionism in the mid-19th century and traces its development to the present day. Topics addressed include Zionism's political and social contexts, how other ideologies shaped Zionism, critics of Zionism, and the effect of Zionism on Jews' relationship to each other and to their surrounding societies. 

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