01:563:220
Hebrew Bible (3)
An introduction to the literature of the Hebrew Bible, accomplished by concentrating on the books of the Torah, the historical material in Joshua through Kings, and selected prophets--all of which are studied against the backdrop of ancient Near Eastern literature, history, religion, mythology, and law.
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01:563:222
Introduction to Ancient Judaism (3)
Historical development of Judaism in ancient times from its origins in ca. 1200 BCE through the Roman period ca. 300 CE. Emphasis on the beliefs and practices of ancient Judaism during biblical and postbiblical periods, as reflected in the literature of the times (such as the Bible, Dead Sea Scrolls, and Mishna) and in the archaeological record.
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01:563:223
New Testament (3)
Interpretation of basic Christian scriptures in translation; influence of Jesus and Paul on the early Christian community.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:840:202.
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01:563:225
Jewish Music (3)
Introduction to biblical cantillation, medieval Jewish music, liturgical and Hasidic melodies, Yiddish folk songs, and the music of modern Israel.
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01:563:226
History of Jewish Art (3)
Synagogue frescoes and architecture, medieval illuminations, Jewish ritual art, and Israeli art.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:082:255.
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01:563:241
Introduction to Rabbinic Literature (3)
Introduces students to the Rabbinic period and rabbinic texts, including the Mishnah, the Talmud, and midrashic literature.
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01:563:243,244
Modern Jewish Literature (3,3)
Works of great Jewish writers from Russia, Germany, France, Italy, the United States, and Israel, from late 19th century to the present, in translation.
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01:563:250
Jewish Mysticism and Kabbalah (3)
Survey of Jewish mystical traditions from the early rabbinic traditions to the central text of kabbalistic literature, the Zohar, in 13th-century Spain.
Credit not given for this course and 01:840:250.
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01:563:254
Hasidic Tales (3)
Legends and stories; a study of the ideals and values of the Ba'al Shem
Tov and other Hasidic masters from the 18th century to the present.
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01:563:260
Remembering the Shtetl (3)
How Jewish life in eastern European small towns has been documented and recalled from the 19th century to the present in fiction, art, ethnography, film, and memoir.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:260.
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01:563:261
History of the Holocaust (3)
Development of anti-Semitism in modern European history, culminating in the "Final Solution"; special emphasis on Jewish response and resistance.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:261.
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01:563:300
The Arab-Israeli Conflict (3)
Evolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict over the past century. Emphasis of this course is on the conflict's origins, dynamics, and complexities rather than on prescriptions for solution.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:508:300 or 01:685:300.
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01:563:304
Jewish Cinema and Fiction (3)
Comparative study of Jewish themes in Yiddish, Israeli, American, and European films (with English subtitles) and their literary sources; discussions and readings in English.
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01:563:306
American Jews and the Media (3)
Examines the roles that news media (film, recordings, radio, television, and computers) plays in American Jewish life throughout the 20th century.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:050:300.
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01:563:310
Israeli Culture (3)
Formation of modern Israeli culture since the beginning of Zionist immigration to Palestine; its historical, social, literary, and artistic expressions.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:508:310 or 01:685:310.
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01:563:311
Classical Jewish Philosophy (3)
Major trends and figures in medieval Jewish thought; Jewish Platonism (Solomon ibn Gabirol); Jewish Aristotelianism (Maimonides); the critique of philosophy (Hallevi); and Jewish philosophy in the Renaissance.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:730:311.
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01:563:312
Modern Jewish Philosophy (3)
Thinkers and systems in modern Jewish philosophy, including interpretations of Jewish tradition; Jewish Kantianism (Cohen, Buber); Jewish existentialism and postmodernism (Rosenzweig, Levinas); the Holocaust; and Jewish feminism.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:730:312.
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01:563:314
Jews, Heretics, and the Inquisition (3)
A survey of the medieval, Spanish, and Roman inquisitions, focusing on these institutions' attitudes toward, and treatment of, heretics, Jews, and conversos. Students will study how these inquisitions operated and examine their legal precedents as well as their relations to the social, political, and religious tensions of their day. Students will also consider broader historical questions about forms of intolerance and modes of persecution.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:314.
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01:563:315
Topics in Rabbinic Literature (3)
Examines a wide array of topics in classical rabbinic literature.
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01:563:316
Israeli Women: Historical and Literary Perspectives (3)
Impact of socialism, nationalism, ethnicity, religion, and feminism on Israeli women's roles within the family, labor force, army, kibbutz, and politics.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:508:316 or 01:988:316 or 01:685:316.
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01:563:321
Jewish Women and Spirituality (3)
This course examines a variety of issues pertaining to gender and women in Judaism. It investigates some of the theological and social aspects of the tension between traditional Judaism and feminism.
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01:563:322
Women in the Bible (3)
Literary readings of biblical stories about women, with special emphasis on their roles, representation, and literary types. All texts in English translation.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:988:314.
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01:563:323
Women in the Bible--Hebrew Seminar (1)
Optional 1-credit add-on for students enrolled in Women in the Bible who wish to further their understanding of the texts by reading them in the original Hebrew.
Prerequisite: Intermediate Hebrew or higher. Corequisite: 01:563:322.
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01:563:324
Ancient Near Eastern Religions (3)
Religious patterns in Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Canaan, Israel, and Egypt from texts in translation; their impact on cultural developments of the Near East.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:840:301.
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01:563:325
Hebrew Prophets (3)
Development and diffusion of Israelite prophetic thought from early associations with divination in Near Eastern culture through the Exile and later decline.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:840:303.
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01:563:332
The American Jewish Experience in Literature (3)
Patterns of alienation and assimilation of an American ethnic group as portrayed in its literature. Attention to early narratives as well as the works of contemporary writers such as Roth, Potok, Bellow, Malamud, and Singer.
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01:563:335
Jewish-American Women: Contested Lives (3)
Explores the Jewish-American female identity in autobiography and memoir, social history, literature, and film. Examines interplay of religious belief, secularism, social mobility, and acculturating influences within American experience.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:050:335 or 01:988:334.
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01:563:336
Jewish Historical Fictions (3)
Explores a variety of Jewish historical fictions and their relationship to the historical periods they purport to represent, from late antiquity to the modern period. Special emphasis is given to comparing works of history with works of fiction. Topics include: Second Temple Sectarianism; Medieval Jewish Marriage Law and Customs; Mysticism; Sabbatianism; and Revolution in the Soviet Union.
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01:563:340
The Dead Sea Scrolls (3)
Introduction to the history and scholarship surrounding the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:840:340.
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01:563:341
Jesus the Jew (3)
The purpose of this course is to explore the historic figure of Jesus within the context of first-century Palestinian Judaism. We will study the main groups and institutions of Judaism at the time of Jesus, using them as a backdrop against which to "map" out Jesus and his teachings, thus gaining familiarity with Second Temple, rabbinic, and early Christian traditions. Among the topics to be covered: Jesus and the Law, Jesus and the Temple, the problem of religious authority and types of religious leaders, the Sermon on the Mount, the "Parting of the Ways," and more.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:840:310.
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01:563:343
History of Zionism (3)
Messianism, forerunners of Zionism; ideology of Zionism; pioneer movements; the Yishuv and its institutions. The state of Israel: its structure, and inner and outer life.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:386 or 01:685:343.
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01:563:345
American Jewish History and Culture (3)
History of the Jews in the New World, beginning in the middle of the 17th century, and then focusing on the United States until the present.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:512:345.
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01:563:346
Ethnography of Contemporary Jewish Life (3)
Study of contemporary Jewish life, especially in America--in communities, institutions, rituals, personal histories, etc.--through the approach of fieldwork and ethnographic writing.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:050:337.
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01:563:350
Introduction to the Modern Middle East (3)
Introduction to the languages and cultures of the Middle East and facilities of cross-cultural communication and understanding between the people of the West and Middle East.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:685:350.
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01:563:351
Contemporary Politics in the Middle East (3)
Contemporary politics of the Middle East through scholarly literature and through documentary-type films dealing with socioeconomic and cultural influences on politics.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:685:351 or 01:790:351.
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01:563:352
Israeli Politics (3)
Basic understanding of the historical background of the establishment of the state of Israel; major characteristics of the political culture and institutions and how they have responded to the dynamic sociocultural and political changes that have shaped the society.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:790:352 or 01:685:352.
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01:563:359
Blacks and Jews in American History (3)
Explores the history of blacks and Jews in America with an eye on three centuries of cooperation and conflict.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:512:359 or 01:014:359.
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01:563:365
Holocaust Literature in Translation (3)
Interpretation of works dealing with the Holocaust by leading Hebrew, Yiddish, and European writers. Appropriate films used.
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01:563:366
Holocaust Media (3)
Examines the wide array of uses of media to represent the Holocaust, from during World War II to the present. Examples range from wartime radio broadcasts and newsreels to documentaries, television dramas, videotaping of Holocaust testimonies, art photography, as well as the use of media in museum displays and tourist practices.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:195:371.
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01:563:367
American Jewish Writers of the 20th Century (3)
Cultural, literary, attitudinal aspects of American Jewish fiction: Abe Cahan, Henry Roth, Daniel Fuchs, Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, and others.
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01:563:370
Germany Confronts the Holocaust (3)
This course analyzes the shifting role of the Holocaust in postwar German public life--in art, literature, museums and other memorials, film, television, and political discourse. Some attention will also be given to Austria and Switzerland; contrasts will be drawn to the place of the Holocaust in postwar and contemporary America.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:470:310 or 01:195:370.
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01:563:373
History of Jewish Women (3)
Jewish women's history; examines the religious, social, intellectual, and cultural environments of Jewish women from the biblical period through the 20th century.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:506:373 or 01:988:373.
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01:563:375
Jewish Immigrant Experience (3)
Modern Jewish immigrant experience, focusing on European and Middle Eastern communities resettled in America, Israel, and Europe.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:506:375.
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01:563:380
German-Jewish Literature and Culture (3)
Survey of German-Jewish culture, 18th century to present. Literature in political-historical context, with some attention to music, philosophy, and film.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:470:380.
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01:563:381,382
Topics in Jewish Studies (1.5,1.5)
Topics vary. Topics announced when course is offered.
Seven-week courses; may be taken consecutively or separately.
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01:563:383
Modern Jewish Art (3)
The Jewish experience in modern art.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:082:380.
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01:563:384
Yiddish Literature and Culture from Tradition to Enlightenment (3)
Traces the cultural dynamics of Ashkenazic Jews in 16th- to 19th-century Europe through Yiddish religious writing, folktales, fiction, memoirs, and poetry. All readings in translation.
Prerequisites: 01:563:202, 260, or permission of instructor. Credit not given for this course and 01:470:384.
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01:563:385
The History of East European Jewry (3)
Economic, legal, and political conditions of Jewish life from the 16th century to World War II. Forms of Jewish response: autonomism, messianism, Hasidism, emigration, and socialism.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:385.
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01:563:386
Modern Yiddish Literature and Culture (3)
Yiddish prose, poetry, folklore, theater, and film in Europe and America from the late-19th century to the Holocaust. Knowledge of Yiddish not required.
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01:563:388
Jewish-Christian Relations through the Ages (3)
Jewish-Christian relations from the first century of the Common Era through to the start of the 21st century. The course focuses both on the history of interactions between Jews and Christians--persecutions, collaborations, conversions, etc.--and also on the history of theological stances and popular attitudes.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:388.
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01:563:389
Jewish Power, Jewish Politics (3)
Political relationship of the Jewish community to the Gentile
authorities among whom they lived, from Rome in 70 CE to the
contemporary period. Continuities and discontinuities of
traditional conceptions of Jewish political behavior and rebellion, and
accommodation to structures of power in varying historical contexts.
Prerequisite: At least one course in Jewish or European history after 1500. Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:389.
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01:563:390
Jewish Memory (3)
Explores various forms of Jewish memory shaped in response to major events, including myths, holidays, monuments, pilgrimages, testimonies, museums, literature, and film.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:510:390.
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01:563:393
Israeli Theater and Film (3)
Comparative and interdisciplinary approaches to Israeli theater and film as a crossroads between East and West.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:195:393.
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01:563:394,395,396,397
Topics in Jewish Studies (3,3,3,3)
Selected themes in Jewish studies. Topics announced when course offered.
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01:563:404
Spinoza (3)
Spinoza's theological political treatise: prophecy, miracles, and faith and reason. Spinoza's ethics: God and his attributes, the human mind, and human bondage and freedom.
Prerequisites: Two courses in philosophy. Recommended: 01:730:205 or 307. Credit not given for both this course and 01:730:404.
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01:563:408
Sociology of American Jewish Religious Movements (3)
Denominational patterns of America's Jews; religious patterns including Hasidism, fundamentalism-secularization, women's roles, intermarriage, and intra- and interreligious patterns.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:920:408.
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01:563:451
Critical Perspectives on the Middle East (3)
Promotes critical thinking about the Middle East by analyzing how stereotypes and Western political thinking hinder intercultural understanding, and encourages students to think more dynamically about the relationship between the United States and the developing world.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:685:451 or 01:790:451.
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01:563:460
Jewish Studies Internship (3)
Supervised work in a historical society, archive, museum, communal
agency, etc.; 112 hours required. Assigned faculty member supervises
and evaluates student's project/paper and sponsor's assessment.
Special note: Open only to junior and senior Jewish studies majors and minors.
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01:563:480
Modern Middle Eastern Literature in Translation (3)
Modern literature in the Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, and Turkish traditions; with a focus on poetry, the short story, and the novel.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:195:490 or 01:685:490.
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01:563:482,483
Advanced Topics in Jewish Studies (1.5,1.5)
Highly specialized advanced courses open to both undergraduate and graduate students. Specific titles available at registration.
Seven-week courses; may be taken consecutively or separately.
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01:563:490
Studies in Jewish History (3)
In-depth study of selected issues and problems in Jewish history and culture.
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01:563:491,492
Independent Study and Research (3,3)
Individual reading research project under the guidance of a Jewish studies faculty member on a topic of interest to the student. Final written report required.
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01:563:495
Special Topics in Literature (3)
Selected themes in Hebrew, Yiddish, or other Jewish literature. Topics announced when course offered.
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01:563:496,497
Senior Honors (3,3)
Independent research project under supervision of a faculty member, culminating in an honors thesis that must be approved by the program.
Prerequisite: Permission of department director.
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