Course Offerings
As always, check BU Brain for the latest updates, course descriptions, details and registration. Fall classes will be posted soon!
SPRING 2026
Mini Courses | Hebrew | Israel Studies | Judaic Studies | Religious Studies | Yiddish
MINI COURSES
These 2 credit mini courses will run from March 23 - May 6.
JUST 281A - Jewish Stories: It's Been Fun
Attribute: W
MW 1:30-3:30 p.m.
Instructor: Connie Beth Burch
The Jewish story or tale is vital to Jewish tradition, for as the saying goes, “G‐d
made man because He loves stories.” The Jewish Short Story explores the genre of the
Jewish short story as it evolves from folktale to contemporary art form. We will study
technical aspects of the short story (character, setting, plot, etc.) and read deeply
to examine how these short pieces of fiction articulate Jewish life, history, and
tradition through the centuries, including our own. All stories will be in English,
some in translation.
JUST 281C - Antisemitism Then and Now
Attribute: W
MW 4:15-6:15 p.m.
Instructor: Allan Arkush
This course will survey the history of antisemitism from antiquity to the present.
It will examine Greek and Roman antagonism toward the Jews, Christian and Muslim theological
animus toward them, and the emergence in modern Europe and the United States of secular
antisemitic ideologies and movements. It will conclude with a consideration of the
relationship between antisemitism and anti-Zionism.
HEBREW
HEBR 102 - Hebrew II - Gen Ed: WL2, FYA
Cross listed: HEBR 502
Time: M/T/W/R 9:45-10:45 a.m.
Instructor: Orly Shoer
Second semester of the communicative introduction to the language and its culture. Provides a thorough grounding in reading, writing, grammar, oral comprehension, and speaking. Prerequisites: HEBR 101 with a grade of C- or equivalent or permission of instructor.
HEBR 204 - Intermediate Hebrew - Gen Ed: WL3, FYA
Cross listed: HEBR 504
Time: M/W/F 11 a.m. -12 p.m.
Instructor: Orly Shoer
Intermediate-level language and culture course with emphasis on the reading of literary and non-literary texts, grammar and writing. Prerequisite: HEBR 103 with a grade of C- or equivalent or permission of instructor.
HEBR 312 - Texts and Conversations II - Gen Ed: WL3
Cross listed: HEBR 506
Time: M/W/F 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Instructor: Orly Shoer
In this course students will advance their Hebrew language skills through reading,
discussing and writing about a variety of short fiction and nonfiction texts and visual
material. Writing practice and reviewing of grammar will be incorporated through the
presented materials. Taught in Hebrew. Prerequisites: HEBR 204 with a grade of C-
or equivalent or permission of instructor.
ISRAEL STUDIES
ISRL 180A - First-year Arabic II - Gen Ed: WL2, FYA
Cross listed: ARAB 102
Time: Section 01 M/T/W/R 9:45-10:45 a.m. & Section 02 M/T/W/R 11 a.m. -12 p.m.
Instructor: Farida Badr
This course is the second in a sequence of courses in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA),
the language of all official forms of communication and media throughout the Arab
world, the register of Arabic taught in countries where Arabic is an official language,
the liturgical language of more than two billion Muslims worldwide and millions of
Arab Christians, and one of the six official languages of the United Nations. In this
course, students will continue to acquire basic skills in the areas of speaking, reading,
writing, and listening. They will further develop the ability to speak about themselves,
their lives, and their environment; to initiate and sustain conversations on daily-life
topics with educated native speakers; to read simple, authentic texts on familiar
topics; to write formal notes and sentences on subjects connected to daily life; to
comprehend and produce accurately the basic sentence structures of Arabic; and to
understand aspects of Arab culture connected to everyday life, including culturally
significant idioms used among friends and acquaintances and important expressions
for polite interaction with speakers of Arabic. Prerequisite: successful completion
of ARAB 101/501 or the equivalent level of proficiency as determined in advance by
the Undergraduate Director.
ISRL 205 - Becoming Israeli - Gen Ed: D, H, T, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 205 / COLI 280F
Time: T/R 11:45 a.m. -1:15 p.m.
Instructor: Lior Libman
At the center of Becoming Israeli stands a protagonist in the process of becoming: a youngster being educated, learning about themselves, about the world, and about life, overcoming obstacles, maturing, forming their identity. In this class, we will explore the thematic and structural characteristics of such narratives, focusing on Israeli examples in their historical and cultural contexts. We will look at tensions between the individual and their society in the moral and psychological development of the protagonist, and will delve into questions of national affinities, class, gender and sexuality in their passage from childhood to adulthood. The course is an Area Course in Literature for the Minor in Israel Studies, a Literature Course for the Major/Minor in Hebrew, and an Area Course in Israel Studies for the Major/Minor in Judaic Studies.
ISRL 215 - Israeli-Palestinian Conflict - Gen Ed: G, N, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 215 / HIST 285B / ARAB 280A
Time: W/F 9:45-11:15 a.m.
Instructor: Shay Rabineau
Israel-Palestine comprises the territory that lies between the Mediterranean Sea (on the west), Lebanon (in the north), the Gulf of Aqaba and the Sinai Peninsula (on the south) and the Jordan River (on the east). Although it covers a small geographic area and includes a relatively small population (compare present-day Israel's 8 million citizens with Egypt's 90 million), the dispute between the two rival sets of nationalisms which claim the sole right to control this territory has remained at the forefront of international attention for more than half a century. This course will examine the origins of the Arab-Israeli dispute from the mid-nineteenth century through the founding of the state of Israel and expulsion/flight of three quarters of a million Palestinians from their homes till the present day. Among the topics to be examined: the social history of Palestine up to Zionist colonization, the origins of Zionism and Palestinian nationalism, varieties of Zionism, Zionism and colonialism, seminal events and their consequent symbolic connotations (the 1936 "Great Revolt," the 1948 "Nakba" [disaster]) and creation of the state of Israel, the construction of a national consensus in Israel, 1967 and its aftermath, the intifada, and the redefinition of the conflict as a result of Oslo, the second intifada, the security fence, HAMAS, Hizbollah and the Lebanon War.
ISRL 227 - Israeli Cultures - Gen Ed: N, G, T, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 227 / ARAB 280D / ANTH 280P / HMRT 289X
Time: T/R 1:30-3 p.m.
Instructor: Talia Katz
This course uses the anthropological method to explore how identity and difference
are lived and produced in modern Israel. In contrast to media accounts that often
reinscribe generalized figures of “the Israeli” or “the Palestinian,” this course
engages ethnography, social history, film, and literature to investigate the fine
grains of experience within a diversity of communities. These include — but are not
limited to — Holocaust survivors, Palestinian citizens of Israel, the ultra-Orthodox,
immigrants from the former Soviet Union, African asylum seekers, and Thai migrant
workers. We begin by examining the foundational displacements and migrations that
shaped the contours and categories of contemporary Israeli society. We then explore
how individuals and communities navigate and respond to these forces in their everyday
lives. No prior background required, all are welcome. Note: "Israeli Cultures" and
"Cultures and Society in Israel" are the same course and may not be repeated for credit.
ISRL 280A - Second-year Arabic II - Gen Ed: WL3, FYA
Cross listed: ARAB 204
Time: MTWR 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Instructor: Farida Badr
ISRL 280A is the fourth in a sequence of courses in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA),
the language of all official forms of communication and media throughout the Arab
world, the register of Arabic taught in countries where Arabic is an official language,
the liturgical language of more than two billion Muslims worldwide and millions of
Arab Christians, and one of the six official languages of the United Nations. In this
course, students will continue to acquire more vocabulary and learn fundamental morphological
and syntactical structures that allow them to express themselves and respond to communication
with ease in predictable situations; request and provide information; write and speak
comprehensibly at the sentence level; read basic texts through making use of contextual
knowledge and familiar vocabulary; and listen to and comprehend simple and straightforward
speech—one utterance at a time. As no language exists in a vacuum, learning about
Arab culture will constitute an integral component of this course. Prerequisite: successful
completion of ARAB 203/503 or the equivalent level of proficiency as determined in
advance by the Undergraduate Director.
ISRL 324 - The Kibbutz in Israeli Culture - Gen Ed: D, H, T
Cross listed: JUST 385B
Time: T/R 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: Lior Libman
The course focuses on representations of the kibbutz, a unique Israeli social formation
which aimed at combining Zionism and Socialism, nation-building and the construction
of a new, just society. Throughout the past hundred years, the kibbutz has been portrayed
in countless literary texts and visual images. In this class, we will analyze and
discuss selected literary and cinematic works from different genres and periods to
examine the history of the kibbutz-image and the relationship between it and the kibbutz’s
history, while also asking, in a broader context, how social and political visions
are shaped in, and are shaping, images. Texts will be read in translation. No previous
knowledge is required, but for students who took Intro to Israeli Lit. This course
will be a continuation of their studies. The course is an Area Course in Literature
for the Minor in Israel Studies, a Literature Course for the Major/Minor in Hebrew,
and an Area Course in Israel Studies for the Major/Minor in Judaic Studies.
ISRL 380B - Translation, Media & Politics - Gen Ed: H, O, T, W
Cross listed: ARAB 380B / TRIP 380E / GMAP 381C
Time: M/F 11:45 a.m. -1:15 p.m.
Instructor: Ahmad Ayyad
This course explores the complex intersections of translation, media, and political
discourse in the Middle East. Students will examine how translation practices shape
and are shaped by ideological struggles, contested narratives, and power dynamics
across languages. Drawing on interdisciplinary frameworks from translation studies,
media studies, and political discourse analysis, the course investigates how translation
mediates ideologies, constructs narratives, and challenges power structures within
a region historically shaped by linguistic tensions and geopolitical conflict. Through
critical readings, media analysis, and case studies, students will develop a deeper
understanding of translation as a politically charged act—one that not only reflects
but also constructs power relations and political meaning in the Middle East.
ISRL 380C - Law & Life: Israel/Palestine - Gen Ed: I, N, D, T, W
Cross listed: JUST 380C / ARAB 380E / HMRT 389X / ANTH 380B / GMAP 381F
Time: T/R 9:45-11:15 a.m.
Instructor: Talia Katz
This upper-level seminar introduces students to concepts and methods in legal anthropology,
focusing on conflict and mass atrocity in Israel/Palestine. As anthropologists in
training, we will explore how law both shapes and is shaped by the societies and cultures
in which it exists. Topics of study to include: the foundational place of Holocaust
trials (e.g. Eichmann, Kastner) in crafting Israeli collective memory, the later shift
from criminal to civil law in the adjudication of Nazi genocide, the creation of the
Israeli military court system post-1967, the Oslo Peace Process, how international
legal institutions as the ICC and ICJ shape local political discourses, and the tensions
between the laws of military occupation and armed conflict. We will ask questions
such as: what kinds of compromises do witnesses make when they testify to the ‘unspeakable?’
What narratives are produced through the process of building a legal case, and how
do these narratives reflect broader political or cultural discourses? How do different
groups understand the failures of law, and what kinds of new institutions or practices
do they create in response?
JUDAIC STUDIES
JUST 111 - Philosophy of Religion - Gen Ed: H, T, FYA, W
Cross listed: RELG 111 / PHIL 111 / COLI 180L
Time: M/W 9:45-11:15 a.m.
Instructor: Randy Friedman
This introductory course will explore the many philosophical questions which emerge
from a study of religious thought. Topics will include the nature of religious subjectivity,
divinity, prayer, sacrifice, and faith. We will study some central biblical and non-Western
stories and narratives and literary, philosophical, and theological responses to them.
Students will practice techniques of textual exegesis and directly engage texts.
JUST 140 - Survey of American Jewish Lit - Gen Ed: C, H, FYA
Cross listed: ENG 180B / COLI 180R
Time: R 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Instructor: Connie Beth Burch
Through the Golden Door: Survey of American Jewish Literature: This course traces
through literature the realities and challenges of being Jewish in America from after
the Civil War to the present. We will read in all genres, exploring topics such as
the immigrant experience, acculturation and assimilation, anti-Semitism, generational
conflicts and differences, gender issues, and continuing themes in the body of work.
Quizzes, short pieces of writing, mid-term examination, and final examination.
JUST 180B - History of Holocaust - Gen Eds: D, I, N, T, FYA, W
Cross listed: HIST 181C / EEES 181C
Time: M/W 12:15-1:15 p.m.
Instructor: Eliyana Adler
This course will provide the crucial historical context for understanding the genesis
and development of genocide in mid-century Europe. We will also look at the responses
of different victim groups, both during and after the Holocaust.
JUST 202 - Jewish History 1500 to Modernity - Gen Eds: G, N, I, T, FYA
Cross listed: HIST 285E
Time: T/R 1:30-3 p.m.
Instructor: Allan Arkush
This course surveys the major historical developments encountered by Jewish communities
beginning with the Spanish Expulsion in 1492 up until the present day. We will first
explore the features of the “early modern” period, such as mercantilism and large-scale
demographic shifts, and chart the ways in which they transformed the traditional position
of the Jew in society. We will then shift to the modern period, which saw a dramatic
reordering of political, social, economic, and cultural life. We will study the various
ways in which Jews across the world engaged with emerging notions of nationality,
equality, and citizenship, as well as with new ideologies such as liberalism, socialism,
nationalism, imperialism and antisemitism. We will examine differing patterns of
acculturation and assimilation, as Jews adopted numerous ways to negotiate the tension
between the “particular” and the “universal.” By focusing both on European Jewry as
well as the Jewish communities of the Middle East and North Africa, we will chart
not one all-encompassing model of Jewish modernity, but a more complex story that
unfolded from Marrakesh to Berlin, from Istanbul to Vilna and beyond. This course
satisfies the core and survey requirements for Judaic Studies majors and minors.
JUST 280G - Sephardic Roots & Routes - Gen Ed: N, T, WL2, CEL, FYA
Cross listed: HIST 285C / SPAN 281A
Time: T/R 11:45 a.m. -1:15 p.m.
Instructor: Dina Danon & Bryan Kirschen
This interdisciplinary course foregrounds the language and history of Sephardi Jews,
or Jews who were expelled from the Iberian Peninsula in 1492 and later dispersed across
the Mediterranean. From the perspective of language, Professor Kirschen will guide
students in learning Judeo-Spanish, commonly known as Ladino, the vernacular used
by Sephardi Jews in the lands of their dispersion until the present day. Students
will also have the opportunity to meet and interact with contemporary speakers of
the language. Professor Danon will introduce students to the historical experiences
of Sephardi Jews, covering key topics spanning from the medieval “Golden Age,” the
Expulsion, the reconstitution of Sephardi communities in Ottoman lands, the rise of
new nation states, and the Holocaust. Students will gain not only proficiency in an
endangered language that spans the Jewish and Hispanophone worlds, but also wide-ranging
exposure to a rich and often-overlooked civilization that thrived for hundreds of
years. This course will be taught in English; no prior knowledge of Hebrew or Spanish
is necessary.
JUST 280J - Intermediate Persian I - Gen Ed: FYA
Cross listed: PERS 203
Time: M/W 9:45-11:15 a.m.
Instructor: Omid Ghaemmaghami
This course advances students from the high-elementary to the intermediate level in
reading, writing, speaking, and listening Persian. Building on PERS 102/502, students
expand their vocabulary and mastery of core grammar (including compound verbs, past
and future narration, the subjunctive, relative clauses, and register shifts between
colloquial and formal Persian). Classwork emphasizes paragraph-level communication:
students read and discuss short authentic texts (news items, essays, dialogues, and
brief literary excerpts), write summaries and short compositions, and engage in pair/group
tasks that develop conversational fluency and narrative ability across everyday and
academic topics. Audio-visual materials—music, film clips, and contemporary media—are
integrated to strengthen comprehension and deepen cultural understanding of practices
and perspectives in Iran and other Persian-speaking societies. Successful completion
of PERS 102/502 (Elementary Persian II) or equivalent proficiency is required. Completion
of PERS 203 fulfills the World Languages WL3 (third-level course) General Education
requirement and also meets a requirement of the major and minor tracks in Middle East
Studies (MES).
JUST 284E - AncientMiddleEast: FromTheEast - Gen Ed: G, I, N, T, FYA
Cross listed: ARAB 281A / AMS 283A / HIST 285A / PERS 280A / ANTH 280M
Time: T/R 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: John Starks
In this social and cultural history course, student and instructor will investigate
the extensive achievements, complex power networks and rivalries, and significant
challenges discernible for several major cultures of what Greeks and later “Western”
writers termed “the East,” based on their own biases about their own exceptional qualities
and the “otherness/alterity” of cultures to their geographic east. While guided by
expert contemporary scholars through archaeological and historical study of these
cultures’ documents, literatures (when extant), and material artifacts, and the extensive
writings of their Greek, Roman, Israelite/Judaic, and other rivals, we will seek to
understand “Phoenicians,” Carthaginians, “Syrians” (broadly construed, as in antiquity),
and Persians, and from their own perspectives, as often as possible; this will always
require critical filtering of the elite and inimical biases, inside and outside their
cultures, that still influence perceptions of these powerful ancient civilizations
which, at one time or another, exerted their own imperial control and cultural influence
over wide expanses around the Mediterranean from the late second millennium BCE to
the fifth century CE and beyond, in some form. Investigations will include delving
into all aspects of daily life: religion and traditions; politics, law and governmental
systems; warfare and diplomacy; economics, labor, crafts, and trade; languages; ethnic
identity, suppression, and adaption; socioeconomic differentials in autocratic, oligarchic/plutocratic,
and enslaving societies; arts and entertainment; urban planning and architecture,
public, monumental, private, and domestic; gender and sexuality; health and living
conditions; modes of dress and gesture/expression; aging, death, and memorialization.
To this end, we will utilize modern and contemporary artistic, literary, musical,
and cinematic/visual performance materials to interrogate the pervasive reach of “Orientalism”
in shaping, re-molding, and warping impressions and understandings of these cultures
and their later ancestors to the detriment of global peace, interdependence, and human
rights. Students will show their command of material and learning outcomes through
extensive readings and daily class discussion/debate, regular quizzes, two term essay
exams, and a short, group project on a documentary, epigraphical, or material object
independent investigation on a topic regarding one of these or other cultures in the
larger geographic regions studied during the term, which will be shared on the final
exam day.
JUST 343 - Post Holocaust Literature - Gen Ed: C, H
Cross listed: ISRL 386K / COLI 331F / ENG 380W
Time: T 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Instructor: Paul Burch
This course addresses primarily fiction and memoir written after the Holocaust by second-
and third-generation descendants of survivors of the Shoah. Central to our reading
will be issues of representation, authenticity, the role of memory, the problems and
limits of language, questions of trauma, the phenomenon of post-memory, and the development
of post-Holocaust Jewish identities. Note: Not appropriate for first-year students.
JUST 352 - American Jewish Thought - Gen Ed: C, D, H, T, USD
Cross listed: RELG 380D
Time: M/W 1:30-3 p.m.
Instructor: Randy Friedman
This course offers both a historical and a theological study of the American Jewish
community, from its origins through contemporary times. We engage central historical
and sociological studies of American Jews in relation to Protestant, Catholic, and
Baptist Americans, as well as other minority groups. We will also examine central
philosophical and theological texts in American Judaism. Students will also read short
works of American Jewish literature. We will examine how specific Judaic thinkers
transform aspects of the Judaic tradition to fit the challenges of religious life
in the modern and democratic age, and the response(s) to this transformation. Questions
include: the relationship between theology and democratic culture, challenges to inherited
religious traditions, the influence of feminist thought on religious practice, and
the place and function of religious authority. The final third of the term will be
spent analyzing rabbinic rulings on homosexuality and same-sex marriage.
JUST 380U - Jews, Family & Sex in E.ModWor - Gen Ed: G, W
Cross listed: HIST 381V
Time: M/W 5-6:30 p.m.
Instructor: Jonathan Karp
This course surveys the entirety of the early modern Jewish world, particularly Christian
Europe and the Ottoman Mediterranean and Middle East, discussing the family as an
institution within Jewish law, the promulgation of sexual norms and deviations from
them, and the institutions of marriage and child rearing. We will consider the perception
of continuity in Jewish family structures over long periods of time as measured against
the palpable influence of the institutions and practices of the non-Jewish communities
among which Jews lived, with special emphasis on the place of women in Jewish societies.
We will also look at the impact of kabbalah, asceticism, and messianic movements on
sexual attitudes and practices. The course utilizes rabbinic legal literature, including
responsa, ethical musar texts, mystical writings, and the handful of surviving memoirs,
among other sources. No previous knowledge of Jewish history is assumed or required.
This course meets Judaic Studies major/minor survey requirements.
JUST 384D - Nazi Culture - Gen Ed: H, W
Cross listed: GERM 380X / HIST 381Q / COLI 381R / GMAP 381N
Time: M/W 5-6:30 p.m.
Instructor: Harald Zils
The National Socialists' takeover of Germany had enormous impact on society. This
also included the transformation of the cultural sphere: the complete takeover of
German film production by the regime; the persecution of authors, artists and intellectuals;
the banning of numerous works; the “Gleichschaltung” of schools, universities, publishers
and other cultural institutions. As part of their war of conquest, the Nazis soon
wanted to control the cultural production of all of occupied Europe. At this point,
the regime's influence had already spread into everyday German life, even leading
to the development of a unique form of medicine, supposedly a better fit for Aryan
bodies. The course examines the impact of the political on the cultural. What measures
did the new rulers use to ensure the new direction of social discourse? How did the
established institutions respond? Was there resistance -- and if so, what did it look
like? We analyze primary sources: Propaganda films such as “Hitlerjunge Quex,” “Triumph
of the Will,” and “I Accuse,” decrees and laws, newspaper articles, radio programs
and private diary entries of the “inner exile,” as well as excerpts from literary
texts that carefully skirted censorship. Course taught in English.
JUST 384G - Bitcoin & Jewish History - Gen Ed: H, I, O
Cross listed: ISRL 385A / HIST 385L
Time: M/W 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: Michael J. Kelly
In this course, students will learn what blockchain, crypto and the decentralization
movement are and what they can mean for History and the Humanities, with Jewish History
as our historical case study. The next stage in the development of the Digital Humanities
is its integration of distributed ledger technology in the form of blockchain. The
Humanities are only beginning to think about how to productively communicate with
and deploy the world of blockchain and its decentralized technology and political
mission in its profession. But what is already clear is that blockchain and its array
of tools will force the Humanities and Higher Education as a whole to rethink and
transform or face becoming outmoded and disconnected from the public, becoming historical
relics instead of historical agents. But, how precisely will blockchain decentralize
History and the Humanities, and what will this mean for Jewish History?
JUST 385C - Jews and Others in US PopMusic - Gen Ed: D, N, W
Cross listed: HIST 380G
Time: M/W 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: Jonathan Karp
American Jews have played a prominent if not predominant role in the development of
twentieth-century popular music. What distinguishes the Jewish contribution is that
it was divided almost equally between the creative and business sides of the music
industry. This course broadly surveys the history of modern American popular music,
from ragtime to hip-hop, and examines how producing music for sale offers insights
into key dimensions of American life, including ethnic and race relations, shifts
in the realm of fashion and style, in gender identities and sexuality, and the transformative
force of American capitalism. No technical background or specific knowledge of pop
music history is assumed or required. But we will listen to a lot of it!
JUST 432 - Sephardi Diasporas - Gen Ed: C, G, I, N, T
Cross listed: HIST 441 / HIST 560B
Time: R 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Instructor: Dina Danon
Sephardi Diasporas Professor Dina Danon Spring 2026 Course Description: This course
traces the Sephardi community from its medieval origins until the present day. Starting
with al-Andalus and the “Golden Age” of Spain, we will track developments such as
the Reconquista, the Inquisition, and the Expulsion of 1492. We will then follow the
paths Sephardi took Jews after the Expulsion, to both western Europe and the Americas
and to Ottoman lands. Among the themes we will discuss in this post-Expulsion period
are the emergence of converso and crypto-Jewish identities as well as the importance
of mercantile and kinship networks. Moving to the Ottoman Empire, we will trace the
reconstitution of Sepharadi in the lands of Islam and the establishment of a Ladino-speaking
heartland in the eastern Mediterranean. Moving to the modern period, we will study
how Sephardi Jews navigated the profound political and cultural changes of the modern
period, among them westernization, colonialism, and nationalism. We will explore the
dislocation wrought by the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire in the wake of World
War I through the eyes of its Sephardi subjects, and then study their devastating
and often forgotten experience of the Holocaust. Finally, we will study the position
of Sephardi and “Oriental” Jews in the State of Israel as well as in 21st century
Jewish communities across the globe.
JUST 441 - Holocaust Fiction - Gen Ed: C, H
Cross listed: ISRL 385B / COLI 480T / ENG 450Y
Time: R 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Instructor: Paul Burch
Issues of memory, representation, and voice are addressed in the reading of Holocaust
fiction. The class reads through the prism of the literature of witness novels and
short stories—most by Holocaust survivors—including works by Appelfeld, Fink, Borowski,
Grynberg, Lustig, Nomberg- Przytyk, Rawicz, Kosinski, and Wiesel. Several short papers,
mid-term examination, and final examination are required. Accompanied by a speaker/lecture
series. Notes: prerequisite, sophomore standing; not appropriate for first-year students.
Required texts may include: Lawrence Langer, Art from the Ashes (Anthology), Piotr
Rawicz, Blood from the Sky, Jerzy Kosiński, The Painted Bird, Elie Wiesel, Gates of
the Forest, Hans Keilson, The Death of the Adversary, David Grossman, See Under: Love,
André Schwarz-Bart, The Last of the Just.
JUST 480E - Women and the Holocaust - Gen Eds: C, D
Cross listed: HIST 572A / HIST 485A /, WGSS 480H / GMAP 538E / EEES 480A
Time: M/W 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: Eliyana Adler
This course will offer students the opportunity and ability to explore the roles of
gender and sexuality in Holocaust Studies. Specifically, we will focus on two distinct
but related questions. Firstly, is it possible to study women’s experience during
the Holocaust? Secondly, if so, how does that knowledge advance our understanding
of the larger event?
RELIGIOUS STUDIES
RELG 101 - Religions of the World - Gen Ed: G, H, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 100 / AFST 180E / ANTH 180C
Time: M/W/F 11 a.m. -12 p.m.
Instructor: Michael J. Kelly
What does it mean to study religion from a scholarly perspective? What is the difference
between finding truth by a religious facticity process (method) vs finding it through
an academic discipline's science? Answering questions like these and developing our
skills as students and researchers of religion is of no small importance in a society
competing over truth claims and "facts". This class will take a historical and theological
approach to a number of religious traditions with the aim of discovering the foundational
(mathematical?) connectivities of world religions.
RELG 280B - Islamic Cultures in Africa - Gen Ed: D, H, T, FYA
Cross listed: COLI 280J / SOC 280B / ANTH 280V / AFST 251 / ARAB 281E
Time: M/W/F 9:45-10:45 a.m.
Instructor: Moulay Ali Bouanani
Islam has a rich cultural and artistic heritage in Africa. With a history that goes
back to the seventh century, it is now a vital part of the African cultural landscape.
This introductory course explores a range of Islamic cultural productions from the
advent of Islam to modern times by Muslim men and women in different regions of Africa
from North to South and from East to West. It will focus on religious didactic writings,
literature, music, architecture and documentary films in studying the syncretism of
Islam and indigenous African religions and/or cultures, and in highlighting the unifying
cultural influences of the religion. The course will also attend to the distinctive
character of the vast contemporary post-colonial cultural productions in music (religious
& profane), film, architecture and literature in large African metropolises with significant
Islamic populations, and it will devote attention to the underlying factors and issues
of artistic production of Muslims of Africa.
RELG 312 - Radical Religious Movements - Gen Ed: C, H, T
Time: T/R 11:45am-1:15 p.m.
Instructor: Douglas Jones
This course focuses on movements that are deemed radical by their contemporaries.
Topics will vary from week to week, though generally we will focus on the self-professed
religious identity of these movements alongside their relationship with the broader
religious culture. Do radical religions consider themselves radical? How do they communicate
with, or seek to influence, the mainstream? Major themes include the proliferation
of utopian and messianic movements in the seventeenth-century, socialism and religion,
religion and violence, religion and suicide, the anti-cult movement in America, and
the relatively recent appearance of sci-fi religions. Students who took RELG 212 course
will not receive credit for 312.
RELG 361 - Bible and Its Interpretations - Gen Ed: C, H
Cross listed: JUST 361
Time: M/W/F 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Instructor: Douglas Jones
This survey course takes a comparative approach to the history of biblical interpretation
by looking at diverse communities within the Jewish and Christian traditions. How
have these communities used the Bible to understand their place in history, address
present tribulations, and even predict the future? What major conflicts have arisen
over the issue of interpretation? Some topics include the theme of movement in the
Torah and rabbinical tradition, 18th and 19th century biblical scholarship, the meaning
of allegory in Catholic and Protestant interpretation, and the so-called literal sense
of scripture. We will also close by considering the issue of biblical interpretation
as it relates to new religious movements in America.
RELG 380B - Gods, Kings, and Emperors - Gen Ed: N
Cross listed: PLSC 389Y / MDVL 381A / AAAS 381A
Time: T/R 3:15-4:45 p.m.
Instructor: Kristina Buhrman
An exploration of the concept of divine or blessed rulership, or sacred kings, from
god-kings to anointed politicians in the modern day. This course will introduce examples
from Asian history, from the earliest examples of priest-kings in pre-Imperial China,
to the divine Emperor of pre-war Japan, to contemporary Thai kings and the cult of
modern dictators, as in North Korea. We will examine a number of case studies, comparing
them to divine rulers in other parts of the world and various historical periods,
from Mesopotamia to medieval Europe and to 20th-century revolutionary leaders during
the end of the colonial period in Africa and the Middle East. The ways in which concepts
of divinely-mandated rule can be used against leaders will be one topic of study,
as will the boundary between humans and divine beings. Through these examples we will
investigate how leaders take or maintain power, and how they motivate followers to
action. No prerequisites required.
RELG 380H - Religion in the Age of Trump - Gen Ed: H, T, W
Cross listed: HIST 380E / PLSC 382O
Time: M/W/F 9:45-10:45 a.m.
Instructor: Douglas Jones
The basic assumption behind this course is that American Christianity has evolved
in new and unexpected ways, beginning roughly with Trump's first term as President
of the United States. The goal is to understand the diverse expressions of Christianity
that both support and critically engage with MAGA culture. Over the course of the
semester, we will consider the evolution of prophetic and charismatic Christianity,
reevaluate the so-called "spirit of capitalism" in a 21st-century context, listen
to religious voices on the right and left that seek to bring religion firmly into
the public square, and trace the role of prosperity theology, positive thinking, practical
antinomianism, and online sermonizing in our emerging religious landscape.
YIDDISH
YIDD 102 - Yiddish II - Gen Ed: O, WL2, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 180A/ GERM 281J / RUSS 280A / YIDD 502
Time: M/W 1:30-3 p.m.
Instructor: Gina Glasman
Follows on from Yiddish 101 as students sharpen their linguistic skills with more
complex sentence structure, a deeper knowledge of tenses and cases, and a broader
vocabulary. In addition, we explore Yiddish culture through film, stories, folk sayings
and the occasional joke! As always, lyrics from Yiddish popular songs provide the
backbone of the class, and individual attention is a feature of the instruction. Note:
interested students can join 102 directly without having taken 101. (Instructor permission
needed.)
YIDD 280A - The Story of Yiddish Cinema - Gen Ed: A, C, FYA
Cross listed: JUST 284A / GERM 281D / CINE 285K / RUSS 280D / EEES 280B
Time: T/R 5-6:30 p.m.
Instructor: Gina Glasman
Yiddish cinema had its start in the silent movie era of the early twentieth century.
Today, a movie with any Yiddish content is a rarity. But in between then and now,
Yiddish cinema had a golden age, built upon the cultural appetites of the Jewish Eastern
European heartlands, and its Yiddish-speaking, immigrant reinventions in New York
City and beyond. Using a multi-disciplinary approach, this class will examine aspects
of this ethnic film scene, and what it once meant (and even now means) to speak Yiddish
in the “language” of cinema.
YIDD 354 - Modern Yiddish Culture - Gen Ed: H, J
Cross listed: JUST 354 / GERM 380K / RUSS 381D / EEES 354
Time: T/R 1:30-3 p.m.
Instructor: Gina Glasman
In the half century before the Second World War, a Yiddish speaking "Jewish Street" stretched from Buenos Aires to Boston, from London to Lodz, with many cities in between. What characterized the culture of this mostly urban and modernizing society is the subject of this class. Cinema and short stories, poetry and politics provide our vehicle to explore the world of Eastern European Jewry in a time of radical transformation and approaching catastrophe (all material is in English).