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Jewish Studies minors at Â鶹¹ú²úAV take courses across multiple disciplines and regions of the world. This enables them to explore the breadth and depth of Jewish culture and history, including the ancient roots of Jewish life and thought, the Jewish peoples’ dispersion across lands and continents, and the development of the variety of Jewish cultural and linguistic expressions and worlds. Students have the opportunity to learn Hebrew, ancient and modern, and read biblical texts in the original Hebrew language.

  • Students will learn to understand the breadth and variety of Jewish Culture and history across many cultures, from the Middle East and within the Islamicate, to Europe and the Americas, and as far afield as the Far East and South Asia as well as Oceania.
  • Students will gain a foundational understanding of the ancient roots and sources of Jewish life and thought, and then of the Jewish people's dispersion across lands and continents, and their later development of a wide variety of cultural and linguistic expressions and worlds.
  • Students will be able to take courses in a number of cultural expressions, including but not confined to Jewish literature and history, philosophy, anthropology, sociology, government, religion, and psychology.
  • Students will have opportunities to pursue both breadth and depth by working with faculty on research projects as well as taking a variety of courses. They will become familiar with multiple methods and disciplines that address a wide variety of aspects of Jewish thought and history.

A Sampling of Courses

Â鶹¹ú²úAV's Torah ark

Ancient Jewish Wisdom

An introduction to the Jewish Tradition and Jewish way of reading.

Explore these select courses:

Close reading of selections from the Jewish Bible (Old Testament) that address the nature of political leadership, the nation, justice, and the best form of government. Examination of politics in the Bible and in the Israelite nation. Comparison with works from other cultures (Greece, Rome, Islamic world) that focus on justice and biographies of political leaders. In addition to the Bible, readings may include Sophocles’ Antigone, Machiavelli’s The Prince, the Roman Stoics, and Arabic political texts.

An examination of art and media from the rise of fascism in the 1920s and the outbreak of World War II in 1939 to postwar reconstruction and the entrenchment of the Cold War in the 1950s. We will study a range of visual material – including film, newsreels, photographs, paintings, illustrations, and comics – not simply as representations of war, but as the cultural fronts on which an unprecedented global conflict unfolded. Students will learn about the evolution of artistic practice and popular culture in Allied and Axis nations, and consider how visual media worked as propaganda, news, and entertainment.

Is religion a source of conflict in the modern world? Investigates examples of religious difference and negotiation from Asia and Europe. Focus on political and religious differences over sacred space, conversion, and Love-Jihad, and interactions among Hindus and Muslims in India.

The Middle East is facing a period of instability and transformation. The aim of this course is to explore the foreign policy decisions of Middle Eastern states. Through class discussion, film, and guest speakers, this course will examine the security challenges facing major players in the region (Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon). Particular attention will be given to theories of foreign policy decision-making in nondemocratic states.

Meet Our Faculty

Heidi Ravven

Professor of Jewish Studies

hravven@hamilton.edu

Baruch Spinoza, Moses Maimonides, neuroethics, and Jewish studies

Nadya Bair

Assistant Professor of Art History

nbair@hamilton.edu

History of photography; photojournalism and news media; modern and contemporary visual culture; media studies; digital humanities; World War II and the Holocaust; Jewish Studies

Michael Feinberg

Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History

mfeinber@hamilton.edu

Visual culture of Europe and the Americas (18th and 19th centuries), history and theory of landscape, decolonial theory, queer theory, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Jewish Studies (particularly Sephardim and Mizrachim)

Shoshana Keller

Chair and William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of History

skeller@hamilton.edu

Russian and Soviet history, Central Eurasian history, and history of the modern Middle East

Michael Lipkin

Visiting Assistant Professor of German Studies

mlipkin@hamilton.edu

literary realism; ethics, political, and social history of Germany; documentary literature

Ian Mills

Visiting Assistant Professor of Classics and Religious Studies

imills@hamilton.edu

Early Christianity Late Antiquity New Testament Ancient Judaism

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Contact

Department Name

Jewish Studies Department

Contact Name

Heidi Ravven

Office Location
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323

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