Faculty Seminar - Art, Crime and Jewish Apostasy in Renaissance Florence

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Thursday, April 2, 2020
10:00 AM
The Bildner Center, 12 College Ave

Lectures on Judeo-Arabic

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Thursday, March 12, 2020
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
MU112

Life as Allegory, Allegory as Life: Orthodox Gay Men in Israel

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Wednesday, March 11, 2020
12:00 PM
The Bildner Center, 12 College Ave

Ahikam Ferber-Tzurel, Ph.D. candidate in Gender Studies at Ben Gurion University, will speak about his dissertation research on the construction ofreligious and sexual identity among Orthodox gay men in contemporary Israel.

Bring your lunch!

Lectures on Judeo-Arabic

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Tuesday, March 10, 2020
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
MU112

Revolutionary Jews: The Politicization of the Iranian Jewish Communities in the Twentieth Century

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Tuesday, February 18, 2020
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Academic Building West (15 Seminary Place), Room 6051

In March 1978 a revolutionary group won the elections for the leadership of the Jewish community in Iran. This newly elected leadership hoped to show the support of the community to the mass movement that led to the 1979 revolution, by forming alliances with leaders and active participation in revolutionary operations. From that moment, Jews participated in demonstrations in growing numbers and published newspapers and pamphlets aimed to recruit more members to this movement. This talk will analyze the social and political transformation Iranian Jews had undergone in the second half of the twentieth century and led to an increasing role Jews played in the political parties.

Reception immediately followed by a talk with Lior Sternfeld, Assistant Professor of History and Jewish Studies at Penn State University.

Event organized by Neda Blourchi from The Center for Middle Eastern Studies and cosponsored by the Department of Jewish Studies.

Deviance, Usury and Religious Difference in Medieval Europe: On the Construction of Jewish Economic Difference

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Thursday, February 13, 2020
4:30 PM
Van Dyck 301

Distinguished Lectures in European History presents Deviance, Usury and Religious Difference in Medieval Europe: On the Construction of Jewish Economic Difference with Julie Mell from North Carolina State University.

Sponsored by Rutgers Jewish Studies, the Center for European Studies and the Department of History.

February 13, 2020 at 4:30 PM in Van Dyck 301

Faculty Seminar - "O Beastly Jew!" Jews, Animals, and Jewish Animals in the Middle Ages

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Tuesday, November 19, 2019
10:00 AM
The Bildner Center, 12 College Ave

"I Remember the Jews": Memory, Dual Marginality, and Belonging as Haratin in 20th- Century Morocco

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Wednesday, October 30, 2019
12:00 PM
The Bildner Center, 12 College Ave

This talk, given by Moyagaye Bedward, Rutgers PhD candidate, Department of History, will explore how the Haratin, a community marginalized because of its putative slave history, engages in memory and cultural preservation as means of cultivating a sense of local and national belonging in Morocco. Specifically, it will examine how Haratin preservation of local Jewish history has contributed to combating notions that the Haratin are not indigenous to Morocco and not truly “African.”

Please RSVP to info@JewishStudies.rutgers.edu

Jewish European History: The Challenge Ahead

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Thursday, September 19, 2019
4:30 PM
The Bildner Center, 12 College Ave

The horizons of Jewish Studies and European history have been drawing closer in recent years. Jewish Studies scholars now seek to locate their subjects within European history, and European historians recount transnational histories using the Jewish Diaspora. But convergence is still limited. Rabbinic scholars and European historians still seem to inhabit different intellectual universes, as if their concerns did not matter to each other. Traditional Jewish Studies still do not tell a European story, and European intellectual history does not tell a traditional Jewish one. For traditional Jewish culture to become part of European history, rabbinic discourses must be “Europeanized,” and Jewish European history written, at least in part, out of traditional Jewish sources.

The challenges of Jewish European history exemplify those of writing the histories of other minorities, especially Muslim Europeans. The lecture, given by Malachi Hacohen of Duke University, addresses these challenges, searching for a history that is at one and the same time genuinely Jewish and European, in the hope that it might facilitate other histories written from the margins.