Courses of Study 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Jewish Studies Program
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In the College of Arts and Sciences .
Course Offerings
The Jewish Studies Program was founded as an extension of the Department of Semitic Languages and Literatures, now the Department of Near Eastern Studies, in 1973 and attained status as an intercollegiate program in 1976.
The program has grown out of the conviction that Judaic civilization merits its own comprehensive and thorough treatment and that proper understanding of any culture is inconceivable without adequate knowledge of the language, literature, and history of the people that created it. Accordingly, the offerings in the areas of Jewish languages and literatures have been considerably expanded, and courses in ancient, medieval, and especially modern Jewish history and culture have been added to the program.
It is a broadly based, interdisciplinary program, bringing together faculty from various Cornell departments and colleges.
The Jewish Studies Program supports teaching and research in the many areas of Jewish Studies. It is a secular, academic program, whose interests are diverse and cross-cultural. The program recognizes its special relationship to teaching and research in classical Judaica and Hebraica pursued by the members of the Department of Near Eastern Studies, with particular emphasis on the interrelationship between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
It presently enables students to obtain basic instruction and specialization in the fields of Semitic languages; the Hebrew Bible; medieval and modern Hebrew literature; ancient, medieval, and modern European and Middle Eastern Jewish history; and Holocaust studies. In some of these fields students may take courses on both graduate and undergraduate levels. Faculty throughout the university provide breadth to the program by offering courses in related areas of study.
Website: jewishstudies.cornell.edu
Faculty
J. Mokhtarian (Rabbinic Literature; director), L. Adelson (German-Jewish Literature and Culture), C. Barrett (Classics), K. Bättig von Wittelsbach (Romance Studies), J. Boyarin (Jewish Culture), R. Brann ( Judeo-Islamic Studies), M. Diesing (Yiddish Language and Linguistics), Z. Fahmy (Modern Middle Eastern History), D. Feldshuh (Performing and Media Arts), D. Forman (Yiddish), A. Goldfeld (Hebrew Language), K. Haines-Eitzen (Early Judaism and Early Christianity), L. Khatchadourian (Archaeology), O. Litvak (Modern European Jewish History), M. Migiel (Italian Literature), M. Minawi (The Ottoman Empire), C. Monroe (Near Eastern Mediterranean Studies; Nautical Archaeology), L. Monroe (Hebrew Bible Studies), D. Powers (Judeo-Islamic Studies), E. Rebillard (Jews in the Roman Empire), C. Robcis (European Cultural and Intellectual History), D. Schwarz (Anglo-Jewish Literature), E, Shapiro (Jews in American Literature and Film), G. Shapiro (Russian Jewry), S. Shoer (Hebrew Language), D. Starr, (Modern Hebrew and Arabic Literature; Critical Theory, Middle Eastern Film), P. Stevens (curator), Noah Tamarkin (Sociocultural, Political, and Legal Anthropology), E. Traverso (History & Modern Europe; Memory Studies; Holocaust), S. Zacher (Old and Middle English literature). Emeritus: G. Altschuler (American Studies), D. Bathrick, N. Furman, P. Hohendahl, D. LaCapra, J. Porte, J. Regenstein, E. Rosenberg, N. Scharf, Y. Szekely
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The Major
The major in Jewish Studies will provide students of all backgrounds the opportunity to critically analyze Jewish cultures, histories, literatures, media, thought, and religion. Students who major in Jewish Studies will be exposed to the long arc of Jewish history, while learning the skills of close textual analysis and discovering the complexity behind the formation of religious, ethnic, and cultural identities. At Cornell, students can study Jewish culture, history, media, and texts from: ancient Israel; late antique Mesopotamia; medieval Iberia; the Shoah; Modern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Americas; and beyond.
The Jewish Studies major is designed to put the study of Jewish experiences in a comparative context. The range of courses available to Jewish studies majors highlight Jewish diversity: cultural, ethnic, geographic, linguistic, and racial. Jewish Studies majors can take courses in a variety of disciplines, including archaeology, film, gender studies, history, law, literature, philosophy, politics, race, and religion. Through these courses, and through the fulfillment of the related course requirement, students will gain insight into larger questions of global concern, including the problems of constructions of otherness, inequality, and colonialism—among much else. The major is constructed with a great deal of flexibility, not only to accommodate a range of student interests, but also to make it possible for Jewish Studies students to double major in Jewish Studies and another field.
Major Requirements
No prerequisites are required to enter the Jewish Studies major.
To complete the major, students must successfully complete ten courses.
All courses for the major must be taken for a letter grade and students must receive a grade of C or better in order for it to count toward the major.
Note: In addition to the major requirements outlined below, all students must meet the college graduation requirements .
Jewish Studies Courses:
Required courses (2 courses)
Major electives (7 courses)
Courses in a Related Field (1 course)
The aim of the “Related Course” requirement is to help students situate their understanding of Jewish studies in a theoretical or comparative context. Students will select a related course that is not crosslisted with Jewish studies. The Director of Jewish Studies can help guide students in selecting courses relevant to their interests in Jewish Studies. Only one related course can count toward the major.
Jewish Studies will recognize three broad categories of related courses: Cultural Studies; Ethnic Studies; and Religious Studies. To follow are descriptions of the categories and a few sample courses that could fulfill the “related course” requirement for Jewish Studies:
Cultural Studies: These are courses that will help students situate their study of Jewish cultures by theorizing culture, interrogating cultural formation, or foregrounding critical research methods.
Examples:
Ethnic Studies: Courses that will provide comparative context for students to understand modern Jewish migrations, hyphenated identities, and minority status.
Examples:
Religious Studies: Courses on the study of sacred texts, faith-based communities, theories of religion, and ritual practices other than Judaism.
Examples:
Sample Pathways Through the Major:
Students interested in Modern Jewish Literature
Required Courses:
Major Electives:
Students interested in Jewish History
Required Courses:
Major Electives:
Related Course:
Language Study:
Students may count toward the major up to two courses at any level in a Jewish language (such as Hebrew, Yiddish, or Judeo-Arabic), provided those courses are not being used to fulfill the student’s College of Arts and Sciences language requirement. So, if a student is taking Hebrew to fulfill the college language requirement, they cannot apply the first three semesters of language study (option 1) / or the single semester of upper-level study (option 2) toward the major. The Hebrew curriculum offers six semesters of language study, plus a rotating selection of advanced text courses at the 3000- and 4000-levels. Any two additional Hebrew language courses may apply toward the major. An unlimited number of content courses taught in Hebrew (such as HEBRW 3108 - [Dynamics and Changes of Israeli Culture Through Language and Literature] ) may be applied toward the major. An alternative scenario would involve a student who has fulfilled the college language requirement with another language, say Spanish. If this student decides they also want to learn either Hebrew or Yiddish, they may apply two of the Hebrew or Yiddish language courses at any level (including introductory courses) toward the major. While language study is not required for the Jewish Studies major, we strongly encourage all majors to work on a relevant language during their studies. Students planning to attend graduate school in Jewish studies or related disciplines (Anthropology, Area Studies, comparative Literature, History, or Religious Studies) are strongly encouraged to make language work an ancillary part of the undergraduate major in Jewish studies.
Honors Program
Students with at least a 3.5 GPA in the major may apply for the honors program.
All Jewish Studies majors enrolled in the honors program will be required to conduct independent research and produce a senior project. Students may opt for a one-semester senior project ( JWST 4769 - Research in Jewish Studies ), or a two-semester honors research sequence ( JWST 4998 - Honors Research I and JWST 4999 - Honors Research II ).
If there are not enough students to form a class for JWST 4769 ,Jewish Studies will designate an existing 4000-level course as the senior research seminar. If no “Senior Project” course is offered, students may complete this requirement with an independent study.
In the fall semester, honors students will register for JWST 4998 , which will co-meet with JWST 4769 . In the Spring, honors students would continue in JWST 4999 under the direction of their thesis advisor.
Double Majors
We anticipate that some Jewish Studies majors will carry a second major. The Jewish Studies major requires only two specific courses, granting students flexibility in selecting from a range of major elective course offerings. This structure should make it possible for interested students to fulfill the requirements of two majors simultaneously. In keeping with college requirements, students will only be permitted to count two courses toward both majors. It would also be possible for students to double major in Jewish Studies and either Near Eastern Studies or Religious Studies without duplication. While some Jewish Studies courses are crosslisted with Near Eastern Studies and Religious Studies, the academic fields and the pathways through the respective majors are distinct. There are many Jewish Studies courses about Jewish histories and cultures of Europe and the Americas, that fall outside of the area-studies field of Near Eastern Studies (and are parented by other units on campus). There are also many Jewish Studies courses about forms of cultural expression that are not engaged with the discipline of Religious Studies.
Study Abroad
Students are encouraged to consult with their advisor about options and eligibility to study abroad. With appropriate advance consultation and approval upon return, JWST will accept credits earned abroad toward the major. Students are reminded that the College of Arts and Sciences requires that they carry a minimum of 15 credits during a semester abroad.
The Minor
The Jewish Studies Program offers an interdisciplinary undergraduate minor in Jewish Studies.
The requirements for the minor are as follows:
- Introductory Survey in Jewish Studies: JWST 2644 - Introduction to Judaism , or JWST 2676 - [Holy War, Crusade, and Jihad from Antiquity to Present] , or an equivalent introductory survey in Jewish Studies approved by the director.
- Historical Breadth Requirement: Two Jewish Studies courses at the 2000-level or above, one course whose chronological parameters fall within the period 3000 BCE to 600 CE, and one course who chronological parameters fall within the period 600 CE to the present.
- Upper-level course: One Jewish Studies course at the 3000-level or above. Topical courses taught in Hebrew or other languages may be used to fulfill this requirement.
No course may be used to satisfy two requirements. S/U grades not permitted.
For information on declaring the minor, please contact Chris Caapalongo by sending e-mail to cmc40@cornell.edu.
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