The Sam and Helen Stahl Center for Jewish Studies /jewish-studies/ UW-Milwaukee Thu, 16 Mar 2023 15:18:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Jessica Kirzane, “Translating and Recovering Miriam Karpilove, Yiddish Authoress” /jewish-studies/jessica-kirzane-translating-and-recovering-miriam-karpilove-yiddish-authoress/ Wed, 15 Mar 2023 17:51:38 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=7720 Thursday, April 20, 2023 at 7:00pm 4th Floor Conference Center, Golda Meir Library and over Zoom Faye Greenberg Sigman Woman of Valor Lecture Hybrid Event: In person and also streaming via Zoom, register hereMiriam Karpilove (1888-1956) was a prolific Yiddish writer …

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Thursday, April 20, 2023 at 7:00pm

4th Floor Conference Center, Golda Meir Library and over Zoom

Faye Greenberg Sigman Woman of Valor Lecture

Hybrid Event: In person and also streaming via Zoom, 
Miriam Karpilove (1888-1956) was a prolific Yiddish writer certain of her own importance, even as she was ignored by critics and largely forgotten during her own lifetime. In this lecture, Jessica Kirzane, who has devoted the past several years to translating and championing Karpilove’s work, will explore the author’s barbed criticism of turn-of-the-century Yiddish societal expectations around gender and sexuality. Interweaving Karpilove’s biography with excerpts and discussion of her clever and humorous writing, Kirzane will paint a portrait of a quick-witted writer and the worlds she inhabited and created.

Jessica Kirzane is the assistant instructional professor of Yiddish at the University of Chicago and the editor-in-chief of In geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies. She is the translator of three works by Miriam Karpilove: Diary of a Lonely Girl, or the Battle Against Free Love (Syracuse University Press, 2020), Judith: a tale of love and woe (Farlag Press, 2022) and A Provincial Newspaper and Other Stories (Syracuse University Press, forthcoming). Kirzane publishes regularly about Yiddish language pedagogy and Yiddish Studies pedagogy more broadly, in addition to her scholarship on representations of gender and race in American Jewish literature.

To download PDF flyer click here.

Made possible by the generosity of the Taxman and Temkin families.

Cosponsored by 51’s Creative Writing Program and Departments of English, Translation and Interpreting Studies, and Women’s and Gender Studies

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Antisemitism and Jewish Diversity: When Celebration Becomes Dangerous /jewish-studies/antisemitism-and-jewish-diversity-when-celebration-becomes-dangerous/ Wed, 08 Feb 2023 17:59:12 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1275 Hybrid Event: In person and also streaming via Zoom (register via Zoom here.)   A lecture by Keith Kahn-Harris, author of Strange Hate: Antisemitism, Racism, and the Limits of Diversity In his 2019 book Strange Hate: Antisemitism, Racism and the …

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Hybrid Event: In person and also streaming via Zoom (register via .)

 

A lecture by Keith Kahn-Harris, author of Strange Hate: Antisemitism, Racism, and the Limits of Diversity

In his 2019 book Strange Hate: Antisemitism, Racism and the Limits of Diversity, Keith Kahn-Harris argued that we are seeing the emergence of a “selective” antisemitism, in which non-Jews combine a philosemitic attraction to some sorts of Jews with an antisemitic rejection of others. In this context, drawing attention to – and celebrating – the diversity of the Jewish people can have the unintended consequence of providing a ‘catalogue’ for those who wish to ‘choose’ their preferred Jew. In this lecture, Dr. Kahn-Harris will explore how it might be possible to engage with Jewish diversity in ways that do not unwittingly reinforce selective antisemitism. He will discuss how he dealt with this challenge in working on an educational book of portraits of British Jews, What Does a Jew Look Like (2022)?

Dr. Keith Kahn-Harris is a sociologist and writer, based in London. He is a senior lecturer at Leo Baeck College, an associate lecturer and honorary fellow at Birkbeck College, and the project director of the European Jewish Research Archive at the Institute for Jewish Policy Research. The author or co-author of eight books and editor of several collections and many articles and reviews, his career bridges academia and multiple other worlds. His most recent books are The Babel Message: A Love Letter to Language (Icon) and What Does a Jew Look Like? (in collaboration with Rob Stothard).

Co-sponsored by 51’s Departments of History and Sociology and Division of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion; and by Marquette University’s Department of History and Center for Race, Ethnicity, and Indigeneity Studies

To download the PDF flyer click here.

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“A Nazi Camp Near Danzig,” 2022 Distinguished Lecture by Prof. Schwertfeger /jewish-studies/a-nazi-camp-near-danzig-2022-distinguished-lecture-by-prof-schwertfeger/ Tue, 04 Oct 2022 16:12:55 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1261 Stutthof: A Nazi Camp Near Danzig Prof. Ruth Schwertfeger November 2, 2022 7 pm, CDT Golda Meir Library Fourth Floor Conference Center Register for the Zoom meeting here.   Prof. Ruth Schwertfeger’s book is the first scholarly publication in English …

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Stutthof: A Nazi Camp Near Danzig

Prof. Ruth Schwertfeger

November 2, 2022
7 pm, CDT
Golda Meir Library
Fourth Floor Conference Center
Register for the .

 

Prof. Ruth Schwertfeger’s book is the first scholarly publication in English to break the silence of Stutthof, a concentration camp largely unknown outside of Poland. In this lecture, Prof. Schwertfeger will share her groundbreaking research into this little-known camp, where 120,000 people were interned and at least 65,000 perished.

RUTH SCHWERTFEGER is Professor Emerita of German at 51. Her latest book is A Nazi Camp Near Danzig: Perspectives on Shame and on the Holocaust from Stutthof (Bloomsbury, 2022). She is also the author of In Transit: Narratives of German Jews in Exile, Flight, and Internment During ‘The Dark Years’ of France; The Wee Wild One: Stories of Belfast and Beyond; and Women of Theresienstadt: Voices from a Concentration Camp.

The Stahl Center Distinguished Lecture is made possible by a generous gift by the Baye Foundation. Cosponsored by the Nathan & Esther Pelz Holocaust Education Resource Center and 51’s Golda Meir Libraries.Also supported by 51’s Departments of Ancient & Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures; Global Studies; and History; and by the German Program and the Program in Russian & East European Studies. Click here for PDF program flyer.

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Writer Francisco Goldman in Conversation with Rachel Buff /jewish-studies/writer-francisco-goldman-in-conversation-with-rachel-buff/ Mon, 09 May 2022 14:46:01 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1207 In Monkey Boy, Francisco Goldman’s “brilliantly constructed auto-fiction” (NPR), we meet Francisco Goldberg, a middle-aged writer grappling with the challenges of family and love, legacies of violence and war, and growing up as the son of immigrants – a Guatemalan …

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In Monkey Boy, Francisco Goldman’s “brilliantly constructed auto-fiction” (NPR), we meet Francisco Goldberg, a middle-aged writer grappling with the challenges of family and love, legacies of violence and war, and growing up as the son of immigrants – a Guatemalan Catholic mother and a Russian Jewish father – in a predominantly white, working-class Boston suburb. Told in an irresistibly funny, tender and passionate voice, this extraordinary portrait of family explores the pressures of living between worlds.

NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY NPR, Boston Globe, Kirkus Reviews, AND Washington Independent Review of Books

WINNER OF THE ALMA AWARD FOR BEST JEWISH FICTION

Monkey Boy is a moving story on what it means to be Jewish and Catholic, what it means to have immigrant parents from vastly different parts of the world, and how a Guatemalan Jewish kid in a white Boston suburb finds his way in the world.” — ALMA

 

About the Author
Francisco Goldman has published four previous novels and two books of nonfiction. The Long Night of White Chickens was awarded the American Academy’s Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction. The Interior Circuit was named by the Los Angeles Times one of 10 best books of the year. The Art of Political Murder is now an HBO documentary. Goldman’s most recent novel, Say Her Name, won the Prix Femina étranger. His books have been published in sixteen languages.

About Rachel Buff
Rachel Ida Buff teaches history and comparative ethnic studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is author, most recently, of A is for Asylum Seeker: Words for People on the Move/A de Asilo: Palabras para Personas en Movimiento (Fordham University Press, 2020). Currently she is working on a novel, Holy Toledo, and a book of essays, Thinking Like a Caravan.

The book may be

In partnership with Boswell Books
Co-sponsors: 51’s English Department, Creative Writing and Cultures and Communities programs, and Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Part of the Stahl Center’s ‘Colors of Jewishness’ series, made possible with generous funding from Bader Philanthropies and the Ettinger Family Foundation

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Events connected with Milwaukee Chamber Theatre’s production of Paula Vogel’s “Indecent” /jewish-studies/events-connected-with-milwaukee-chamber-theatres-production-of-paula-vogels-indecent/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 17:16:53 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1160 Indecent at the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, March 10 – 27. Information and tickets here. To download the PDF event flyer, click here. March 7 – May 9: Harry & Rose Samson Family Jewish Community Center. Perhift Players: Yiddish Theater in …

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Indecent at the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, March 10 – 27. Information and tickets . To download the PDF event flyer, click here.

March 7 – May 9: Harry & Rose Samson Family Jewish Community Center. Perhift Players: Yiddish Theater in Milwaukee. Free exhibit in the JCC Surlow Promenade Gallery.

March 15, 6:00 pm CST. Virtual Event. “Why Sholem Asch Matters: A virtual panel discussion with Caraid O’Brien, David Mazower, and Joel Berkowitz. Hosted by the Yiddish Book Center. Free, but

March 17 & 24th. Broadway Theatre Center. Talkbacks following the 7:30 pm performance with actors and guest speakers. Free with admission.

March 22, 7:30 pm. Harry & Rose Samson Family Jewish Community Center. Staged reading of Sholem Asch’s God of Vengeance followed by a Q&A led by Jody Hirsh. Details at

March 23, 6:30 – 7:10 pm. Broadway Theatre Center. ViewPoints: An informal pre-show discussion on ideas, history, and production. Free with admission.

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“The Lives of Jessie Sampter” author Sarah Imhoff in conversation with Rachel B. Gross and Lisa Silverman /jewish-studies/the-lives-of-jessie-sampter-author-sarah-imhoff-in-conversation-with-rachel-b-gross-and-lisa-silverman/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 16:11:24 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1194 “The Lives of Jessie Sampter” author Sarah Imhoff in conversation with Rachel B. Gross and Lisa Silverman

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The Lives of Jessie Sampter
Author Sarah Imhoff in conversation with Rachel B. Gross and Lisa Silverman

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“Jewish Cultural Studies” book launch, author Simon Bronner in conversation with Jonathan Boyarin, Sander Gilman, and Lisa Silverman /jewish-studies/jewish-cultural-studies-book-launch-author-simon-bronner-in-conversation-with-jonathan-boyarin-sander-gilman-and-lisa-silverman/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 16:06:47 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1187 Jewish Cultural Studies book launch, author Simon Bronner in conversation with Jonathan Boyarin, Sander Gilman, and Lisa Silverman

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Jewish Cultural Studies Book Launch
Author Simon Bronner in conversation with Jonathan Boyarin, Sander Gilman, and Lisa Silverman

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Virtual Literary Salon with Elisa Albert, Molly Antopol, & Lauren Fox /jewish-studies/virtual-literary-salon-with-elisa-albert-molly-antopol-lauren-fox/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 16:04:21 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1183 2021 Faye Sigman Woman of Valor
Virtual Literary Salon with Elisa Albert, Molly Antopol, & Lauren Fox

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2021 Faye Sigman Woman of Valor
Virtual Literary Salon with Elisa Albert, Molly Antopol, & Lauren Fox

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Jessica Kirzane: Collaborative Digital Open Access Publishing and Community Building. In Geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies /jewish-studies/jessica-kirzane-collaborative-digital-open-access-publishing-and-community-building-in-geveb-a-journal-of-yiddish-studies/ Tue, 11 Feb 2020 15:18:24 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1039 Thursday, March 12, 2020, 3:00 pm
Digital Humanities Lab, Golda Meir Library 51
Editor-in-chief Jessica Kirzane will discuss how the journal’s born-digital platform and independent funding model open up new arenas for scholarly publishing and collaboration. Her talk will focus especially on the pedagogy section of the journal, which addresses the work many Yiddish Studies practitioners perform day in and day out.

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In Geveb was founded six years ago by a group of then-graduate students to be a central location for the field of Yiddish Studies. It is a free, open-access digital platform without academic affiliation, with a mission to extend the boundaries of the field while fostering community within the field. Editor-in-chief Jessica Kirzane will discuss how the journal’s born-digital platform and independent funding model open up new arenas for scholarly publishing and collaboration. Her talk will focus especially on the pedagogy section of the journal, which addresses the work many Yiddish Studies practitioners perform day in and day out.
Jessica Kirzane is an Assistant Instructional Professor in Yiddish at the University of Chicago and Editor-inchief of In Geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies. She was a 2017 Translation Fellow and a 2018 Pedagogy Fellow at the Yiddish Book Center.

Click here to view the event flier.

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Jim Loeffler: Double Amnesia: Zionism and Human Rights, 1919 – 2019 /jewish-studies/jim-loeffler-double-amnesia-zionism-and-human-rights-1919-2019/ Tue, 14 Jan 2020 21:58:33 +0000 /jewish-studies/?p=1034 April 30, 2020

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2018 marked the 70th anniversary of two momentous events: the birth of the State of Israel and the creation of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Both remain tied together in debates about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, global antisemitism, and U.S. foreign policy. Yet the surprising connections between Zionism and the origins of international human rights remain completely unknown today. Drawing on his recent book, James Loeffler will discuss how the forgotten Jewish past of human rights holds timely lessons for thinking about the intertwined futures of global justice and Jewish politics.

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