Tauber Institute Events
Upcoming Events
November 12, 2024
Yaniv Feller of the University of Florida will present the paper "Confession Booths, Human Zoos, and Adolf Eichmann: Presenting Jews in Berlin" at the Jewish Studies Colloquium on November 12, 2024. The event will take place at Brandeis in Lown 315 and stream live on Zoom at 12:45 pm Eastern. Registration is required for Zoom. The colloquium is free and open to the public, and a light kosher lunch will be served at 12:30 pm.
The paper is available by request only. Please send an email to tauber@brandeis.edu.
November 14, 2024
Join Jehuda Reinharz and Alexander Kaye for a conversation about Reinharz’s latest book, Chaim Weizmann: A Biography, at the Ford Hall Forum at Suffolk University, the nation's oldest continuously operating free public lecture series. This event is part of the First Annual Book Festival, a collaboration between Brandeis University Press, Suffolk University, and the Ford Hall Forum. This new series of author events features recently published books from Brandeis University Press and brings prominent authors to Boston to discuss topics of current and enduring interest. The festival is co-sponsored by GBH Forum Network.The event will take place on Thursday, November 14, 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm Eastern at 120 Tremont Street, 5th Floor Commons, Boston MA.
November 19, 2024
Join the Tauber Institute for the seminar "Hidden Harmonies: Exploring the Music of Medieval Hebrew Rhymed Narratives" with Uriah Kfir, senior lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in the Department of Hebrew Literature. The event will be held in Lown 315.
December 10, 2024
Rebecca Wittmann of the University of Toronto will present the paper "Haunted and Hallowed Grounds: Confronting the German Past in the First Person" at the Jewish Studies Colloquium on December 10, 2024.
Recent Events
October 15, 2024
Andrew Berns of the University of South Carolina presented the paper "Physicians, The Diffusion of Medical Knowledge, and Jewish Culture in Early Modern Europe" at the Jewish Studies Colloquium on Tuesday, October 15, 2024.September 17, 2024
Till van Rahden of the Université de Montréal presented the paper "Nationalism and Its Discontents: Jewish Visions of Pluralism in Central Europe, 1850s-1930s" at the Jewish Studies Colloquium on September 17, 2024.April 16, 2024
The Tauber Institute hosted Hasia Diner of New York University at the Jewish Studies Colloquium. She presented her paper "Writing American Jewish History: An Irish Project" on Tuesday, April 16.
April 4, 2024
Susannah Heschel, the Eli M. Black Distinguished Professor of Jewish Studies at Dartmouth College, delievered the 60th Annual Simon Rawidowicz Memorial Lecture on Thursday, April 4, 2024 at Brandeis University asking, "Does Jewish Studies Have a Theory? Changing Historiographical Methods and Contexts from the 19th Century to the Present."
The Simon Rawidowicz Memorial Lecture is named for Simon Rawidowicz (1896–1957), one of the most innovative Jewish thinkers of the twentieth century and a founding member of the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University. Recordings of Rawidowicz lectures from 2018 to 2023 can be viewed on our Lectures page.
March 28, 2024
At The Vilna Shul in Boston, a discussion featuring translators/editors Frances Malino and Yaëlle Azagury moderated by Jonathan Decter took place Thursday, March 28 at 6:30pm.
Mazaltob is a first-ever English translation of a compelling work by a forerunner of modern Sephardi feminist literature.
Mazaltob, by Blanche Bendahan, is a fascinating portrait of a young Moroccan Sephardi woman as she navigates the ever-shifting ground between tradition and modernity, East and West, self and other, obligation and desire. Stylistically bold, culturally rich, by turns comic and wrenching, this polyphonic novel is both historically important and, in its new translation, a gift for our times.
March 12, 2024
The Tauber Institute hosted Eugene Sheppard—the associate director of the Tauber Institute for the Study of European Jewry and faculty member in the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and the History of Ideas Program at Brandeis University—at the Jewish Studies Colloquium. He presented his paper "Valeriu Marcu: Dialectics, Power, and the Writing of History" at 12:45pm on March 12, 2024.
February 27, 2024
The Tauber Institute hosted Kirsten Collins of the University of Chicago Divinity School to the Jewish Studies Colloquium. She presented her paper "That Other Fornication: Race and Judaism in Foucault's Concept of Critique" on February 27, 2024.
February 13, 2024
The Tauber Institute held another installment of our Author Conversations on Tuesday, February 13 featuring Scott Ury (Tel Aviv University) and Guy Miron (Open University of Israel) in conversation on Zoom with the associate director of the Tauber Institute, Eugene Sheppard.
Ury and Miron are the editors of the new volume Antisemitism and the Politics of History, a groundbreaking study comprised of seventeen essays by prominent scholars from Europe, Israel, and the United States that examines the history of and dilemmas associated with using "antisemitism" and related terms as tools for both historical analysis and public discourse. Antisemitism and the Politics of History is a Sarnat Library book in the Tauber Institute Series for the Study of European Jewry, published by Brandeis University Press.
January 23, 2024
The Tauber Institute hosted Jonathan Crane of Emory University, Emily Filler of Washington and Lee University, and Mira Wasserman of Reconstructionist Rabbinical College at the Jewish Studies Colloquium. They presented their paper "Introducing Modern Jewish Ethics, 1970-Present" on January 23, 2024.
December 5, 2023
The Tauber Institute welcomed Paola Tartakoff of Rutgers University to the Jewish Studies Colloquium. She presented her paper "Mendicant Jewish Converts and Miracle Stories in the Medieval Pyrenees" on December 5, 2023.
November 14, 2023
The Tauber Institute hosted Hadar Feldman Samet of the Tel Aviv University to the Jewish Studies Colloquium. She presented her paper "Between the Public and the Communal: Depictions of Sabbatian Spaces in the Late Ottoman Era" on Tuesday November 14, 2023.
October 24, 2023
The Tauber Institute welcomed Ildikó Barna of Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE) in Budapest to the Jewish Studies Colloquium. She presented her paper "Interdisciplinary Exploration of Post-Holocaust History through Digital Tools: Opportunities and Limitations" on Tuesday, October 24, 2023.
October 20, 2023
Brandeis students, faculty and staff were invited to join an open session of Laura Jockusch's course "Revenge, Justice, and Reconciliation: Mass Atrocity Trials in the Long Shadow of Nazi Crimes" (NEJS 136B) with Tomaz Jardim of the Toronto Metropolitan University discussing his book Ilse Koch on Trial: Making the Bitch of Buchenwald.October 13, 2023
The Tauber Institute presented a discussion of the founding of Brandeis University in the postwar moment, against the backdrop of the aftermath of WWII and the Holocaust, the Nuremberg Trials, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, antisemitism in America, and the founding of the State of Israel.
The event featured opening remarks by Sylvia Fuks Fried, executive director of the Tauber Institute, and a conversation between faculty associates Eugene R. Sheppard, Associate Professor of Modern Jewish History and Thought, Laura Jockusch, Albert Abramson Associate Professor of Holocaust Studies, and ChaeRan Freeze, Frances and Max Elkon Chair in Modern Jewish History, moderated by Jonathan Decter, Edmond J. Safra Professor of Sephardic Studies. The event was part of Brandeis University's 75th Anniversary Celebration.
September 12, 2023
The Tauber Institute hosted Miriam Goldstein of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem for the first installment of the Jewish Studies Colloquium of the 2023-24 academic year on September 12, 2023. She presented her paper "The Bible in Baghdad: A Medieval Karaite Interprets Genesis."
April 27, 2023
"The Soviet Jewish Bookshelf: Jewish Culture and Identity Between the Lines" author Marat Grinberg discussed his book over Zoom with Prof. ChaeRan Freeze.
"Here is the untold story of [Soviet Jews'] ongoing, multigenerational struggle for self-determination as told by a native son with great clarity, thoroughness, and empathy. Were this not enough, Marat Grinberg has also redefined Jewish literature as that which a living polity has rescued through conscious acts of creative rereading." — David G. Roskies, Sol & Evelyn Henkind Emeritus Professor of Yiddish Literature and Culture, The Jewish Theological Seminary
April 25, 2023
The Tauber Institute welcomed Sven-Erik Rose from the University of California, Davis, for the final installment of the Jewish Studies Colloquium of this academic year. He presented his paper "Making and Unmaking Literature in Nazi Ghettos in Poland." The event was exclusively streamed live on Zoom at 12:45 p.m. on Tuesday, April 25, 2023.
April 18, 2023
Prof. Eugene Sheppard's class "Spinoza Now" (NEJS 157A) featured Michael Rosenthal of the University of Toronto as he gave a talk entitled "Spinoza & Revolution." The event was scheduled for 11:10am in Schwartz 103 on the Brandeis campus.
The event was sponsored by the Tauber Institute, with the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, the Center for German and European Studies, and the History of Ideas Program.
March 14, 2023
The Tauber Institute's Jewish Studies Colloquium hosted Jordan Katz of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, as she presented her paper "Registers of Belonging, Registers of Difference: Early Modern Jewish Midwives and their Records." The event was held on Zoom on Tuesday, March 14, 2023.
March 9, 2023
Susan Neiman delivered the 59th Annual Simon Rawidowicz Memorial Lecture, "Racism, Antisemitism, and Rethinking Historical Reckoning," on Thursday, March 9, 2023, in Rapaporte Treasure Hall, Brandeis University.
Susan Neiman is an American philosopher and writer, and the director of the Einstein Forum in Potsdam, Germany. She has written extensively on the Enlightenment, moral philosophy, metaphysics, and politics.
The Simon Rawidowicz Memorial Lecture is named for Simon Rawidowicz (1896–1957), one of the most innovative Jewish thinkers of the twentieth century and a founding member of the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University.
February 14, 2023
Elias Sacks, director of the Jewish Publication Society, presented the paper "Do Citizens Need to be Philosophers? Nachman Krochmal's Diasporic Jewish Politics" at the Jewish Studies Colloquium.
January 24, 2023
Joshua Picard of Princeton University presented the paper "The Precedents and Origin of Djerba's Or Torah Fund," at the Jewish Studies Colloquium.