Course Submission Form

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Course Submission Form"

Transcription

1 Course Submission Form Instructions: All courses submitted for the Common Core must be liberal arts courses. Courses may be submitted for only one area of the Common Core. All courses must be 3 credits/3 hours unless the college is seeking a waiver for a 4-credit Math or Science course (after having secured approval for sufficient 3-credit/3-hour Math and Science courses). All standard governance procedures for course approval remain in place. College Kingsborough Community College Course Number Yiddish 30 Course Title Yiddish Literature in Translation l Department(s) Foreign Languages Discipline Language and Literature Subject Area Credits 3 Contact Hours 3 Pre-requisites English 12 Mode of Instruction Select only one: Enter one Subject Area from the attached list. Yiddish x In-person Hybrid Fully on-line Course Attribute Select from the following: Freshman Seminar Honors College Quantitative Reasoning Writing Intensive X Other (specify): Liberal Arts/ Gen Ed Catalogue Description Designed for non-yiddish speaking students, course consideration is on the emergence of Yiddish writers in the modern world. Emphasis is on the main literary personalities and their major contributions. All readings and discussions in English. Syllabus Syllabus must be included with submission, 5 pages max Waivers for 4-credit Math and Science Courses All Common Core courses must be 3 credits and 3 hours. Waivers for 4-credit courses will only be accepted in the required areas of Mathematical and Quantitative Reasoning and Life and Physical Sciences. Such waivers will only be approved after a sufficient number of 3-credit/3-hour math and science courses are approved for these areas. If you would like to request a waiver please check here: If waiver requested: Please provide a brief explanation for why the course will be 4 credits. If waiver requested: Please indicate whether this course will satisfy a major Waiver requested 1

2 requirement, and if so, which major requirement(s) the course will fulfill. Indicate the status of this course being nominated: x current course revision of current course a new course being proposed CUNY COMMON CORE Location Please check below the area of the Common Core for which the course is being submitted. (Select only one.) Required English Composition Mathematical and Quantitative Reasoning Life and Physical Sciences Flexible World Cultures and Global Issues Individual and Society x US Experience in its Diversity Scientific World Creative Expression Learning Outcomes In the left column explain the assignments and course attributes that will address the learning outcomes in the right column. 2

3 II. Flexible Core (18 credits) Six three-credit liberal arts and sciences courses, with at least one course from each of the following five areas and no more than two courses in any discipline or interdisciplinary field. B. U.S. Experience in its Diversity A Flexible Core course must meet the three learning outcomes in the right column. Students will recognize and have a general knowledge and appreciation for the contributions of modern Yiddish writers to US experience in its diversity, from the inception of Modern Yiddish Literature in the second half of the nineteenth century until the present. Information is gathered, interpreted and assessed from the textbook, class lectures, supplementary readings of short stories not included in the text, articles on critical thought, contemporary readings in the media, film, and music (Yiddish lyrics). Students presentations also include varied points of view. Gather, interpret, and assess information from a variety of sources and points of view. Students will be able to determine the point of view, values, or intent of instructive material. They will understand the ideologies inherent in the various genres of Yiddish literature gain an understanding for differences in culture and also perceive connections within the subject matter and across disciplines. Students will be able to analyze and interpret representative writings of Modern Yiddish literary personalities, especially the classical trio, the three founding fathers of Modern Yiddish Literature: Mendele Mokher Sefarim (Shalom Yaakov Abramovitsh), Shalom Aleichem (Shalom Rabinovitsh), and L. I. Peretz.; to understand their influence on the US experience and to relate these works to contemporary life today. Thus, while Shalom Aleichem had produced his Tevye series in the United States (adapted for stage and film several times, most famously as Fiddler on the Roof), the literary masterpieces of Mendele and Peretz, who never left European soil, have nevertheless impacted Yiddish theatrical production in the United States and Evaluate evidence and arguments critically or analytically. 3

4 have been reworked into modern literary forms in the US. For example, Mendele s Yiddish novels The Travels of Benjamin III, a picaresque satire that parodies life in the Pale of Settlement, and the romantic novel and social satire, Fishke the Lame, have been translated into English and published by Schocken Books in Fishke the Lame has been recast into the Yiddish film, The Light Ahead, that reflects the artistic peak of American Yiddish film. It is at the same time an attack on shtetl life and a romance of an impoverished couple who yearn for emancipation from the superstitions and corruption of the shtetl. David Opatoshu and Helen Beverly dramatize the characters of Fishke and Hodel, two poor and physically disabled lovers who dream of a new life in Odessa. The film, which was produced in 1939 under the direction of Edgar Ulmer, has been restored by the National Center for Jewish Film and is often viewed on campuses throughout the United States. Students will evaluate themes as abuse and/or vulnerability of women, social morality, effects of poverty and unemployment and relate them to their personal worlds and contemporary life in the US. Students will analyze A Night in the Old Marketplace, the recent adaptation of Peretz s 1907 play by Grammy award-winning Frank London into a multimedia production that mixes Jewish music, jazz, and world beats. Students will evaluate the combination of profound musings with vaudeville inspired comedy. Students will gain knowledge of the major trends that contributed towards the development of Modern Yiddish Literature (Haskalah, Hasidism, Socialism, Anti-Semitism), and which, in turn, generated Yiddish theater and cinema in the United States. Students will compare the film Tevye der Milkhiger and the latter Fiddler on the Roof to the literary work from which it derived. Students will be able to interpret instructive material, to summarize information accurately, to reduce information into meaningful components for analysis, to perceive and create logical coherence and discernible themes and patterns across different bodies of information. The student will be able to articulate and argue his positions; to develop his thoughts and perspectives on the reading material, to formulate and understand his own values and to understand Produce well-reasoned written or oral arguments using evidence to support conclusions. 4

5 others values, and to make informed value decisions. Students will support their conclusions as a result of gaining an understanding of the folk culture, traditions, and tensions of Jewish communities in the shtetls of Poland and the Pale of Settlement; an understanding of the forces that resulted in the disintegration of the shtetl and knowledge of the mores and values of the Jewish immigrant. Thus they will be able to analyze and critique the works that chronicled the cultural heritage of the shtetl and that described the socioeconomic conditions of the Jewish immigrants in America; to relate the subject matter to their personal lives; to react personally to the literature read, and to correlate, synthesize, and integrate the diversity of information and ideas. A course in this area (II.B) must meet at least three of the additional learning outcomes in the right column. A student will: Communications and Literature: Yiddish theater and film drew from the classics of Yiddish literature and has served to artistically express and preserve Yiddish classics by masters which included Jacob Gordin, Mendele Mokher Sefirm, Shalom Aleichem, Peretz, Opatoshu, Hirsbein, Pinski, Ansky, Asch, I.J. Singer, and Isaac Bashevis Singer. Yiddish film and theater are invaluable not only for their literary value and historical record of the Jews of Eastern Europe but as a record of the mores and values of the immigrants who fled to America. They are invaluable for a statement of their socio-economic problems, their hopes, joys, and disappointments, in particular the realism and horror of the sweatshops and the difficulties of maintaining one s Jewish identity and ties to the traditional past while striving to acculturate and adjust to the new. Identify and apply the fundamental concepts and methods of a discipline or interdisciplinary field exploring the U.S. experience in its diversity, including, but not limited to, anthropology, communications, cultural studies, economics, history, political science, psychology, public affairs, sociology, and U.S. literature. Students will explore the Golden Era of Yiddish Theatre, and the importance of the Second Avenue Yiddish theatres for the 3.5 million Jews who settled in the US between 1888 and They will evaluate the Golden Era of Yiddish Theatre, which refers to the eighteen year career of the reformation and the flowering of the American Yiddish stage by the Russian born American playwright Jacob Gordin( ), The Jewish Shakespeare, who injected the Yiddish theater with realism and naturalism. Students will discuss how he challenged tradition, how he was influenced by Shakespeare (The Jewish King Lear and Mirele Efros- The Jewish Queen Lear), how he entertained theater goers, and how he shaped the way they saw the world. They will discuss the themes of intergenerational estrangement, the manic pursuit of the dollar, the subject of women s emancipation, and how Gordin impacted the US experience in its diversity not only with his own plays but those that he staged 5

6 by Shalom Ash, Shalom Aleichem, and Peretz. Students will assess the cultural importance of the Second Avenue Yiddish theatres for the Jewish immigrant, and the importance to this day of the Folksbine theatre that has staged numerous classics. Students will become aware of the fact that Yiddish Literature was the basis and the inspiration for theatrical productions that include The Fiddler on the Roof, The Dibbuk, The Tenth Man, Hester Street, and Yentle - productions that continue to reflect the US experience in its diversity. The Tevye Series by Shalom Aleichem (S. Y. Rabinovitsh, ), especially Havvah, is the basis for Fiddler on the Roof, which surpassed 3,000 performances and was the longestrunning Broadway musical for almost a decade. In studying the Tevye Series, the student will integrate history, sociology, and psychology. He will learn how the political events and social conflicts during the reign of Czar Nicolas ll ( ) reflected directly and indirectly in the tragedies of Tevye s daughters; and they will explore why this work has been incredibly popular in the United States and why immigrants of diverse nationalities and ethnic groups in America have identified with Tevye. The student will examine the psychological effects of poverty and the effects of social trends as social idealism, universalism, assimilation, and anti-semitism on the immigrant in United States. He will examine the effects of a changing social order on an individual unequipped to deal with modern development and change, and the resultant generational tensions, conflicts and familial disintegration. In Hester Street, students will continue to explore Jewish life in transition, namely the identity crises suffered by the Jewish American immigrant at the turn of the century. Hester Street, which was recently added to the National Film registry of the Library of Congress is the 1975 film based on Abraham Cahan s Yekl: A tale of the New York Ghetto. Students will read Ansky s play, The Dybbuk, and view the 1937 Polish production of this work, which is the most atmospheric production of the play. Students will analyze its hasidic gothic themes, and how The Dybbuk has continued to fascinate and challenge the mind. Ranked with post-world War I European masterpieces, The Dibbuk was introduced to New York in 1921 by Maurice Schwartz. Radical reworkings of Ansky s play were The Tenth Man, which ran 622 performances in the years from , and the recently released movie, Possession. In their study of the Dybbuk students will delve into and assess the concept of wandering souls finding redemption. They will assess 6

7 the belief in gilgul/reincarnation - the mystical belief that because of certain sins a deceased person s soul must return to the world in another form to expiate that sin, and in the case of a dybbuk, it attaches itself to the soul of a living person. Students will explore the pivotal questions of faith and the ultimate meaning of the universe, which are strong motifs in the works of Isaac Bashevis Singer, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in In their study of Singer students will evaluate the questioning of the foundations of empirical reality or the conception of language as a creator rather than a mirror of reality, or the definition of evil and exile. Students will evaluate his concept of the demonic in his fiction related not to the idea of sin but to his major them of exile and the problem of meaning in darkness. Reading excerpts of Shadows on the Hudson, students will gain an insight into the tortured psyches of Holocaust survivors living in New York City in 1948, the nihilism and despair that suffocated them because of the trauma of the Holocaust, and their ambivalence towards New York. On a lighter level, they will analyze his attitude towards gender roles in Yentle the Yeshiva Boy, which was adapted for the stage in 1974 and became the basis for a multi-million dollar Hollywood musical produced and directed by Barbara Streisand, who also played the title role. THE DEVELOPMENT OF LABOR UNIONS: This course will provide students with the perspective and depth to analyze the formation of labor unions and to appreciate the contributions of Yiddish writers to the development of labor unions. They will learn that the earliest important group of Yiddish writers in New York was known as The Sweatshop Poets, since they responded to the plight of the oppressed immigrants. They will be acquainted with these writers who expressed the suffering of the Jewish worker and summoned him to struggle against his exploiters. The most successful achievements of this poetry were attained mainly in the United States, and included such poets as Morris Rosenfeld, Morris Winchevsky, Abraham Reisen, David Edelstadt, and J. Bovshover. Edelstadt s poem In Struggle (In Kampf), written in 1889, became the hymn of Jewish workers. Abraham Reisen s poem, To the Hammer, became a popular workers song both in Europe and in the United States. Di Grine Khuzine by J. Leiserowitz depicts the waning of the beautiful, young immigrant worker and became a most popular song of immigrant life.they will analyze the anthropocentric poetry of H. Leivick ( ), a sweatshop worker himself and a poet who focuses on man and human suffering. Analyze and explain one or more major themes of U.S. history from more than one informed perspective. Students will realize that the sculpture below, The Garment Worker, commissioned by ILGWU, and on display in front of 555 Seventh Avenue in the Garment District, not only reminds us of the role of the Jewish immigrants in making New York a fashion 7

8 center, but their role in the formation of the ILGWU itself, which was critical for the labor history of the 1920 s and 1930 s. The study of the career and literary contributions of Abraham Cahan will also enhance the student s knowledge of socialism. Cahan was editor from of the socialist Yiddish language newspaper, The Jewish Daily Forward, the most successful non English newspaper in the US. A member of the Socialist Labor Party of America, he contributed massively to the Yiddish-language socialist propaganda, seeing himself as enlightener of the impoverished Jewish working class of New York Students will analyze the development and features of Hasidism, which is intrinsic to the study of Yiddish Literature. Hasidism is a pattern of life, or movement that developed in Eastern Europe during the second half of the eighteenth century, about one hundred years prior to the debut of Modern Yiddish Literature, and has spread throughout Europe and the United States. Since the shtetl is the milieu of much of Yiddish Literature, many characters are Hasidim. (Tevya is a Hasid; the characters in the Evaluate how indigenous populations, slavery, or immigration have shaped the development of the United States. Explain and evaluate the role of the United States in international relations. Identify and differentiate among the legislative, judicial, and executive branches of government and analyze their influence on the development of U.S. democracy. Analyze and discuss common institutions or patterns of life in contemporary U.S. society and how they influence, or are influenced by, race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexual orientation, belief, or other forms of social differentiation. 8

9 Dybbuk are Hasidim,). On the one hand our modern Yiddish writers conflicted with the traditionalism of Hasidism (especially Mendele Mokehr Sefarim), and, on the other, Hasidim have been romanticized by others, especially by Peretz. Students will gain an insight into the major attributes of Hasidism: Emphasis on mystical concepts/ the interrelation between the earthly and the celestial worlds Emphasis on emotion and prayer Belief in the immanence and transcendentalism of God Mans mission of cleaving, or communion with God through prayer Self-nullification Joy/optimism Zaddikism and strong communal affiliation Sanctification of the mundane Belief in the Messiah and the return to Zion Cultural distinction/avoidance of secular infiltration 9

Syllabus Yiddish 03000

Syllabus Yiddish 03000 The City University New York Yiddish 30 Yiddish Literature in Translation 1 Revised, Dr. Gloria W. Pollack June 26,2013 1. Department Course Number and Title Yiddish 03000 Yiddish Literature in Translation

More information

YIDDISH LITERATURE: A PATH TO ETHNIC AWARENESS

YIDDISH LITERATURE: A PATH TO ETHNIC AWARENESS Neil Rudin Professor Rudin is chairman of the Foreign Language Department at State University College at Buffalo. YIDDISH LITERATURE: A PATH TO ETHNIC AWARENESS Although approximately ten millon people,

More information

Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 Course Overview: Learning Goals:

Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 Course Overview: Learning Goals: Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 University of Wisconsin- Madison Fall 2016 Lecture: TuTh 1:00-2:15, 4308 Social Science Prof. Philip Hollander 860

More information

Jewish Studies (JST) Courses. Jewish Studies (JST) 1

Jewish Studies (JST) Courses. Jewish Studies (JST) 1 Jewish Studies (JST) 1 Jewish Studies (JST) Courses JST 0802. Race & Identity in Judaism. 3 Credit Hours. Investigate the relationship between race and Judaism from Judaism's early period through today,

More information

The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts

The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts Correlation of The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts Grades 6-12, World Literature (2001 copyright) to the Massachusetts Learning Standards EMCParadigm Publishing 875 Montreal Way

More information

HI History of the Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe Fall 2012 Tuesdays and Thursdays: 11:00-12:30

HI History of the Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe Fall 2012 Tuesdays and Thursdays: 11:00-12:30 HI 275 - History of the Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe Fall 2012 Tuesdays and Thursdays: 11:00-12:30 Prof. Simon Rabinovitch srabinov@bu.edu http://blogs.bu.edu/srabinov Office hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays,

More information

Learning Outcomes for the Jewish Studies Major. Identify and interpret major events, figures, and topics in Jewish history and culture

Learning Outcomes for the Jewish Studies Major. Identify and interpret major events, figures, and topics in Jewish history and culture March 6, 2013 Learning Outcomes for the Jewish Studies Major Students who complete the Jewish Studies major should demonstrate competence in the following academic skills and fields of knowledge: Jewish

More information

Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269

Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 Yiddish Literature and Culture in Europe Jewish Studies 269/ German 269/ Lit Trans 269 University of Wisconsin- Madison Fall 2017 Lecture: TuTh 1:00-2:15, 583 Van Hise Prof. Philip Hollander 860 Van Hise

More information

Social Studies High School TEKS at School Days Texas Renaissance Festival

Social Studies High School TEKS at School Days Texas Renaissance Festival World History 1.d Identify major causes and describe the major effects of the following important turning points in world history from 1450 to 1750: the rise of the Ottoman Empire, the influence of the

More information

Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description

Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description Division: Special Education Course Number: ISO121/ISO122 Course Title: Instructional World History Course Description: One year of World History is required

More information

LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes

LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes LABI College Bachelor Degree in Theology Program Learning Outcomes BUILD YOUR MINISTRY LABI s bachelor degree in Theology with an urban emphasis focuses on biblical, theological, and ministerial courses

More information

USEM 01a: Jewish Literatures in Eastern Europe: Syllabus. Description of the Course. Prescribed Reading

USEM 01a: Jewish Literatures in Eastern Europe: Syllabus. Description of the Course. Prescribed Reading - 1 - Antony Polonsky Spring 2007 Lown 308 USEM 01a: Jewish Literatures in Eastern Europe: Syllabus Description of the Course The emergence of a modern literary consciousness among the Jews was one of

More information

REL 101: Introduction to Religion- URome Students ONLY Callender, W. Green, Walsh, Husayn, H. Green, Stampino, Pals, Kling Study Abroad

REL 101: Introduction to Religion- URome Students ONLY Callender, W. Green, Walsh, Husayn, H. Green, Stampino, Pals, Kling Study Abroad REL 101: Introduction to Religion- URome Students ONLY Callender, W. Green, Walsh, Husayn, H. Green, Stampino, Pals, Kling Study Abroad This course gives students an introductory exposure to various religions

More information

GREAT JEWISH WRITERS (Ethnicity and Literary Texts)

GREAT JEWISH WRITERS (Ethnicity and Literary Texts) GREAT JEWISH WRITERS (Ethnicity and Literary Texts) JSP/LIT/REL 131 & ETS 184 Prof. Ken Frieden kfrieden@syr.edu Office: 310 Tolley Humanities Building Ofc. hour Th 3:30-4:30 TA: Mitchell Moreau mmoreau@syr.edu

More information

INTERDISCIPLINARY LESSON: CHAIN OF FOOLS

INTERDISCIPLINARY LESSON: CHAIN OF FOOLS OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION Essential Question: How did Aretha Franklin s foundation in Gospel music influence her recording of Chain of Fools, helping to establish a Soul sound and bringing black culture

More information

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST)

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST) JEWISH STUDIES (JWST) 1 JEWISH STUDIES (JWST) JWST 53. First-Year Seminar: Israeli Popular Culture: The Case of Music. 3 An introduction to Israeli popular culture, with a transnational and interdisciplinary

More information

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES MIDDLE EAST STUDIES RECOMMENDED COURSE LIST UPDATED - August 3, 2014

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES MIDDLE EAST STUDIES RECOMMENDED COURSE LIST UPDATED - August 3, 2014 AR 420/520 Folk Tales of the Arabs AR 423/523 Modern Arabic Poetry GEOG 364 The Middle East HST 385, 386 The Modern Middle East HST 484/584 Topics in Middle Eastern History HST 485/585 Ottoman World HST

More information

HISTORY 1400: MODERN WESTERN TRADITIONS

HISTORY 1400: MODERN WESTERN TRADITIONS HISTORY 1400: MODERN WESTERN TRADITIONS This course provides students with an opportunity to examine some of the cultural, social, political, and economic developments of the last five hundred years of

More information

COMPETENCIES QUESTIONNAIRE FOR THE ORDER OF MINISTRY Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in West Virginia

COMPETENCIES QUESTIONNAIRE FOR THE ORDER OF MINISTRY Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in West Virginia COMPETENCIES QUESTIONNAIRE FOR THE ORDER OF MINISTRY Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in West Virginia This worksheet is for your personal reflection and notes, concerning the 16 areas of competency

More information

#HUMN-225 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR HUMANITIES III. Dirk Andrews Instructor

#HUMN-225 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR HUMANITIES III. Dirk Andrews Instructor Coffeyville Community College #HUMN-225 COURSE SYLLABUS FOR HUMANITIES III Dirk Andrews Instructor COURSE NUMBER: HUMN-225 COURSE TITLE: Humanities III CREDIT HOURS: 3 INSTRUCTOR: OFFICE LOCATION: Dirk

More information

Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies

Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies NM 1005: Introduction to Islamic Civilisation (Part A) 1 x 3,000-word essay The module will begin with a historical review of the rise of Islam and will also

More information

The Search for Self--Part I: US Jewish Women Writers

The Search for Self--Part I: US Jewish Women Writers Women's Studies 4300 Fall 2010 Tu: 4:10 6 PM Office: Barnard 201 Dr. Irena Klepfisz Barnard College Office Hours: Tu 1:30-2:30 PM or by appointment Phone: 212-854-2108 e-mail: iklepfis@barnard.edu The

More information

History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s

History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s University of Wisconsin, Madison Spring 2009 Lectures: Tuesday and Thursday, 1:00-2:15 1131 Humanities Prof. Tony Michels Office: 5220

More information

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World HIS 254 (RST/JST 254) M/W/F 9:00-9:50, STA 316 Spring, 2009 Prof. Matthew Hoffman Office: Stager 308 Office Hours: Wed. 1:00-3:00, Fri. 1:00-3:00 Contacts: matthew.hoffman@fandm.edu,

More information

College of Arts and Sciences

College of Arts and Sciences COURSES IN CULTURE AND CIVILIZATION (No knowledge of Greek or Latin expected.) 100 ANCIENT STORIES IN MODERN FILMS. (3) This course will view a number of modern films and set them alongside ancient literary

More information

Messiah College s identity and mission foundational values educational objectives. statements of faith community covenant.

Messiah College s identity and mission foundational values educational objectives. statements of faith community covenant. Messiah College s identity and mission foundational values educational objectives statements of faith community covenant see anew thrs Identity & Mission Three statements best describe the identity and

More information

The Poetry of Faith and Doubt ELUL Aaron Zeitlin and Rebbe Nachman. Poetry of Faith and Doubt

The Poetry of Faith and Doubt ELUL Aaron Zeitlin and Rebbe Nachman. Poetry of Faith and Doubt The ELUL 2018 The : The ELUL 2018 Where does faith live? If you want to find its dwelling go to despair and ask. The path leads through his lands. Faith lives on ruins. On the bare foundation of a building,

More information

SYLLABUS. Department Syllabus. Philosophy of Religion

SYLLABUS. Department Syllabus. Philosophy of Religion SYLLABUS DATE OF LAST REVIEW: 02/2013 CIP CODE: 24.0101 SEMESTER: COURSE TITLE: Department Syllabus Philosophy of Religion COURSE NUMBER: PHIL 200 CREDIT HOURS: 3 INSTRUCTOR: OFFICE LOCATION: OFFICE HOURS:

More information

ENGL : Contemporary Jewish-American Fiction The current generation of Jewish authors in America

ENGL : Contemporary Jewish-American Fiction The current generation of Jewish authors in America University of Nebraska at Omaha Office: ASH 200D Department of English Phone: 402-554-3175 Fall 2014 E-Mail: gavron@gmail.com Assaf Gavron Office Hours: Tuesday 16:30-17:30 or by appointment ENGL 2000-009:

More information

UChicago Supplement:

UChicago Supplement: 2016-17 UChicago Supplement: Question 1 (Required): How does the University of Chicago, as you know it now, satisfy your desire for a particular kind of learning, community, and future? Please address

More information

Outcomes Assessment of Oral Presentations in a Philosophy Course

Outcomes Assessment of Oral Presentations in a Philosophy Course Outcomes Assessment of Oral Presentations in a Philosophy Course Prepares students to develop key skills Lead reflective lives Critical thinking Historical development of human thought Cultural awareness

More information

History 188:03 Introduction to the Bible

History 188:03 Introduction to the Bible Instructor: Professor James Rohrer Office: Copeland Hall 103H Phone: 865-8769 E-mail: rohrerjr@unk.edu New Portal Course Proposal History 188:03 Introduction to the Bible Description of Proposed Course:

More information

ACADEMIC PROGRAMS UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG

ACADEMIC PROGRAMS UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG ACADEMIC PROGRAMS 75 INTRODUCTION From Dr. Paul Brooks, Vice President for Academics: SAGU manages its undergraduate academic program out of three colleges which are served by qualified faculty who have

More information

Revisions to the Jewish Studies Major

Revisions to the Jewish Studies Major Revisions to the Jewish Studies Major 1. Existing requirements (source: 07-08 UG Catalog, p. 146) Requirements for the Jewish Studies major include the College of Arts and Humanities requirement of 45

More information

Georgia Quality Core Curriculum 9 12 English/Language Arts Course: American Literature/Composition

Georgia Quality Core Curriculum 9 12 English/Language Arts Course: American Literature/Composition Grade 11 correlated to the Georgia Quality Core Curriculum 9 12 English/Language Arts Course: 23.05100 American Literature/Composition C2 5/2003 2002 McDougal Littell The Language of Literature Grade 11

More information

Department of. Religion FALL 2014 COURSE GUIDE

Department of. Religion FALL 2014 COURSE GUIDE Department of Religion FALL 2014 COURSE GUIDE Why Study Religion at Tufts? To study religion in an academic setting is to learn how to think about religion from a critical vantage point. As a critical

More information

FALL 2017 COURSES. ENGLISH ENGL 264: The Bible as Literature Pg. 2 LANGUAGES & CULTURES

FALL 2017 COURSES. ENGLISH ENGL 264: The Bible as Literature Pg. 2 LANGUAGES & CULTURES FALL 2017 COURSES ENGLISH ENGL 264: The Bible as Literature Pg. 2 LANGUAGES & CULTURES HISTORY HEBR 101: Modern Hebrew Level I Pg. 2 HEBR 201: Modern Hebrew Level III Pg. 2 HEBR 121: Biblical Hebrew Level

More information

M.A./Ph.D. Program in Mythological Studies

M.A./Ph.D. Program in Mythological Studies GRADUATE INSTITUTE M.A./Ph.D. Program in Mythological Studies PACIFICA GRADUATE INSTITUTE 249 LAMBERT ROAD, CAPRINTERIA, CA 93013 PACIFICA.EDU M.A./Ph.D. in Mythological Studies Students consolidate their

More information

CLASSICS (CLASSICS) Classics (CLASSICS) 1. CLASSICS 205 GREEK AND LATIN ORIGINS OF MEDICAL TERMS 3 credits. Enroll Info: None

CLASSICS (CLASSICS) Classics (CLASSICS) 1. CLASSICS 205 GREEK AND LATIN ORIGINS OF MEDICAL TERMS 3 credits. Enroll Info: None Classics (CLASSICS) 1 CLASSICS (CLASSICS) CLASSICS 100 LEGACY OF GREECE AND ROME IN MODERN CULTURE Explores the legacy of ancient Greek and Roman Civilization in modern culture. Challenges students to

More information

Current Catalog Listing

Current Catalog Listing Theoretical Courses RA-113 Art As Worship, Worship As Art Exploration of the relationships between art-making as a spiritual discipline, using art as a focus for personal devotion, incorporating art forms

More information

JEWISH STUDIES - BACHELOR OF ARTS (BA)

JEWISH STUDIES - BACHELOR OF ARTS (BA) Jewish Studies - Bachelor of Arts (BA) 1 JEWISH STUDIES - BACHELOR OF ARTS (BA) The Bachelor of Arts in Jewish studies is designed to help students develop the professional skills they need to become engaged

More information

ELA CCSS Grade Five. Fifth Grade Reading Standards for Literature (RL)

ELA CCSS Grade Five. Fifth Grade Reading Standards for Literature (RL) Common Core State s English Language Arts ELA CCSS Grade Five Title of Textbook : Shurley English Level 5 Student Textbook Publisher Name: Shurley Instructional Materials, Inc. Date of Copyright: 2013

More information

1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual, and oral communications. (CA 2-3, 5)

1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual, and oral communications. (CA 2-3, 5) (Grade 6) I. Gather, Analyze and Apply Information and Ideas What All Students Should Know: By the end of grade 8, all students should know how to 1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual,

More information

Modern Jewish Literature Jewish Studies 318/ Lit Trans 318

Modern Jewish Literature Jewish Studies 318/ Lit Trans 318 Modern Jewish Literature Jewish Studies 318/ Lit Trans 318 University of Wisconsin- Madison Spring 2017 Lecture: TR 11:00-12:15, Chemistry 1361 Section 301: R 9:55-10:45, Ingraham 215 Section 302: T 3:30-4:20,

More information

Courses Counting Towards the Language Requirement:

Courses Counting Towards the Language Requirement: Fall 2009 Course Listing Updated April 20th Visit the MESP website for more information regarding certificate requirements: (http://mideast.wisc.edu/certificate/) Core Course: Languages and Cultures of

More information

From Geraldine J. Steensam and Harrro W. Van Brummelen (eds.) Shaping School Curriculum: A Biblical View. Terre, Haute: Signal Publishing, 1977.

From Geraldine J. Steensam and Harrro W. Van Brummelen (eds.) Shaping School Curriculum: A Biblical View. Terre, Haute: Signal Publishing, 1977. Biblical Studies Gordon J. Spykman Biblical studies are academic in nature, they involve theoretical inquiry. Their major objective is to transmit to students the best and most lasting results of the Biblicaltheological

More information

HI-614 The Emergence of Evangelicalism

HI-614 The Emergence of Evangelicalism HI-614 The Emergence of Evangelicalism Dr. Brian Clark bclark@hartsem.edu Synopsis: This course will chart the rise and early development of Evangelical Revival, known in the U.S. as the Great Awakening.

More information

JEWISH STUDIES. Libraries

JEWISH STUDIES. Libraries Libraries JEWISH STUDIES The Media and Reserve Library, located on the lower level west wing, has over 9,000 videotapes, DVDs and audiobooks covering a multitude of subjects. For more information on these

More information

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST)

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST) Jewish Studies (JWST) 1 JEWISH STUDIES (JWST) Courses JWST 1040 (3) Beginning Biblical Hebrew, Second Semester Building on HEBR 1030, continues to build expertise in reading the Hebrew Bible. Modern language

More information

MDiv Expectations/Competencies ATS Standard

MDiv Expectations/Competencies ATS Standard MDiv Expectations/Competencies by ATS Standards ATS Standard A.3.1.1 Religious Heritage: to develop a comprehensive and discriminating understanding of the religious heritage A.3.1.1.1 Instruction shall

More information

EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE The Development of Europe to 1650

EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE The Development of Europe to 1650 EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE The Development of Europe to 1650 Course Design 2018-2019 Course Information Division Social Sciences Course Number HIS 104 Title The Development of Europe to 1650 Credits 3 Developed

More information

JEWISH STUDIES. Libraries

JEWISH STUDIES. Libraries Libraries JEWISH STUDIES The Media and Reserve Library, located on the lower level west wing, has over 9,000 videotapes, DVDs and audiobooks covering a multitude of subjects. For more information on these

More information

Holocaust and Genocide Studies Courses Updated 11/15/2012

Holocaust and Genocide Studies Courses Updated 11/15/2012 Holocaust and Genocide Studies Courses Updated 11/15/2012 The Holocaust and European Mass Murder History 30510-OL This course covers the period from the Nazi rise to power in Germany in 1933 to the end

More information

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Collections 2015 Grade 8. Indiana Academic Standards English/Language Arts Grade 8

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Collections 2015 Grade 8. Indiana Academic Standards English/Language Arts Grade 8 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Collections 2015 Grade 8 correlated to the Indiana Academic English/Language Arts Grade 8 READING READING: Fiction RL.1 8.RL.1 LEARNING OUTCOME FOR READING LITERATURE Read and

More information

Department of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy Department of Philosophy Phone: (512) 245-2285 Office: Psychology Building 110 Fax: (512) 245-8335 Web: http://www.txstate.edu/philosophy/ Degree Program Offered BA, major in Philosophy Minors Offered

More information

FALL 2018 THEOLOGY TIER I

FALL 2018 THEOLOGY TIER I 100...001/002/003/004 Christian Theology Svebakken, Hans This course surveys major topics in Christian theology using Alister McGrath's Theology: The Basics (4th ed.; Wiley-Blackwell, 2018) as a guide.

More information

CALVIN COLLEGE CATEGORY I

CALVIN COLLEGE CATEGORY I CALVIN COLLEGE 103 (now 121 131 Biblical Literature and Theology (3). F and S, core. A study of the unfolding of the history of redemption as set forth within the historical framework of the old Testament,

More information

History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s

History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s History 416: Eastern European Jews in the United States, 1880s-1930s University of Wisconsin, Madison Spring 2007 Lectures: Tuesday and Thursday, 4:00-5:15 Humanities: 1641 Prof. Tony Michels Office: 5220

More information

THE AUFBAU-PRINCIPLE of ALEX BARZEL ( ) ---On the Structure of Judaism---

THE AUFBAU-PRINCIPLE of ALEX BARZEL ( ) ---On the Structure of Judaism--- THE AUFBAU-PRINCIPLE of ALEX BARZEL (1921-2005) ---On the Structure of Judaism--- The structure of Judaism is a key publication of former Technion general studies director Alex Barzel and reflects the

More information

BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS

BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS Barbara Wintersgill and University of Exeter 2017. Permission is granted to use this copyright work for any purpose, provided that users give appropriate credit to the

More information

Course Offerings

Course Offerings 2018-2019 Course Offerings HEBREW HEBR 190/6.0 Introduction to Modern Hebrew (F) This course is designed for students with minimal or no background in Hebrew. The course introduces students with the basic

More information

Draft scope and sequence of Knowledge, Understandings and Skills P-12 Religion Curriculum.

Draft scope and sequence of Knowledge, Understandings and Skills P-12 Religion Curriculum. P a g e 1 Draft scope and sequence of Knowledge, Understandings and Skills P-12 Religion Curriculum. Beliefs God, the loving Creator, who reaches out in relationships and gifts the world with God s Spirit.

More information

6 th Grade Jewish American History Curriculum

6 th Grade Jewish American History Curriculum 6 th Grade Jewish American History Curriculum This American Jewish History Curriculum covers Jewish American History from 1492 through the present. I t uses Let Freedom Ring (Behrman House, Inc) and is

More information

Religion. Aim of the subject REL

Religion. Aim of the subject REL 2012-05-03 REL Religion The subject of religion has its scientific roots primarily in the academic discipline of religious studies, and is by its nature interdisciplinary. It deals with how religions and

More information

Eli Barnavi, A Historical Atlas of the Jewish People: From the Time of the Patriarchs to the Present.

Eli Barnavi, A Historical Atlas of the Jewish People: From the Time of the Patriarchs to the Present. INTRODUCTION TO JEWISH CIVILIZATION, 1492 TO THE PRESENT SPRING 2013 HIS 306N, JS 304N, RS 313N, EUS 306 MWF 1-2 pm, WEL 2.304 Professor Miriam Bodian Office: Garrison 2.104a This is the second half of

More information

Prentice Hall U.S. History Modern America 2013

Prentice Hall U.S. History Modern America 2013 A Correlation of Prentice Hall U.S. History 2013 A Correlation of, 2013 Table of Contents Grades 9-10 Reading Standards for... 3 Writing Standards for... 9 Grades 11-12 Reading Standards for... 15 Writing

More information

HUMANITIES AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES

HUMANITIES AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES HUMANITIES AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES BACHELOR OF ARTS SUBJECT MATTER PROGRAM MINOR RELIGIOUS STUDIES MINOR CERTIFICATE PROGRAM DESCRIPTION The Department of Humanities and Religious Studies offers an integrated

More information

Professor V. Aarons English 3473 The Jewish Graphic Novel Spring Office hours: MWF 12:30-1:30 & by appointment 379A NH; extension 7574

Professor V. Aarons English 3473 The Jewish Graphic Novel Spring Office hours: MWF 12:30-1:30 & by appointment 379A NH; extension 7574 Professor V. Aarons English 3473 The Jewish Graphic Novel Spring 2017 Office hours: MWF 12:30-1:30 & by appointment 379A NH; extension 7574 Course Description: This course will examine representations

More information

CHTH 511 CHRISTIAN HISTORY AND THEOLOGY I

CHTH 511 CHRISTIAN HISTORY AND THEOLOGY I CHTH 511 CHRISTIAN HISTORY AND THEOLOGY I (3 credits) Instructor: Randy Woodley 2015 Fall 2015 Semester, OLC MAIS Email: rwoodley@georgefox.edu Cell: 859-321- 9394 Office: 503-554- 6031 COURSE DESCRIPTION

More information

B.A. in Religion, Philosophy and Ethics (4-year Curriculum) Course List and Study Plan

B.A. in Religion, Philosophy and Ethics (4-year Curriculum) Course List and Study Plan Updated on 23 June 2017 B.A. in Religion, Philosophy and Ethics (4-year Curriculum) Course List and Study Plan Study Scheme Religion, Philosophy and Ethics Major Courses - Major Core Courses - Major Elective

More information

Honors 2130 Great Ideas of the East Syllabus Echoes of Religion and Shadows of Culture in Middle Eastern Women s Literature Fall 2 nd Block, 2014

Honors 2130 Great Ideas of the East Syllabus Echoes of Religion and Shadows of Culture in Middle Eastern Women s Literature Fall 2 nd Block, 2014 Honors 2130 Great Ideas of the East Syllabus Echoes of Religion and Shadows of Culture in Middle Eastern Women s Literature Fall 2 nd Block, 2014 Instructors: Dr. Ryan Thomas MA 306 801 626 7931 ryanthomas2@weber.edu

More information

MASTER of ARTS RELIGION RTS VIRTUAL

MASTER of ARTS RELIGION RTS VIRTUAL MASTER of ARTS RELIGION RTS VIRTUAL II Timothy 2:15 Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who correctly handles the word of truth. M A S T E R O F A R T S I N R E L I G I

More information

HEBREW 331 : HEROES AND HEROINES IN BIBLICAL FILMS

HEBREW 331 : HEROES AND HEROINES IN BIBLICAL FILMS HEBREW 331 : HEROES AND HEROINES IN BIBLICAL FILMS INSTRUCTOR : YAIR MAZOR, PROFESSOR DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE HEBREW STUDIES PROGRAM YMAZOR@UWM.EDU COURSE DESCRIPTION This course

More information

Syllabus Examining Our Christian Heritage 2

Syllabus Examining Our Christian Heritage 2 Syllabus Examining Our Christian Heritage 2 Virginia District Training Center @Virginia District Training Center Hope Community Class Dates: Sep 13, Sep 20, Sep 27, Oct 4, Oct 11 Class Time: 5:30 pm 9:30

More information

UNDERSTANDING UNBELIEF Public Engagement Call for Proposals Information Sheet

UNDERSTANDING UNBELIEF Public Engagement Call for Proposals Information Sheet UNDERSTANDING UNBELIEF Public Engagement Call for Proposals Information Sheet Through a generous grant from the John Templeton Foundation, the University of Kent is pleased to announce a funding stream

More information

Welcome to Bachelor of Arts in Leadership and Ministry!

Welcome to Bachelor of Arts in Leadership and Ministry! Welcome to Bachelor of Arts in Leadership and Ministry! Kansas Christian College is proud to offer online degree programs to accommodate the educational needs of busy adults. With KCC Online, you can get

More information

History of the Jews in the Modern World HI 219 Fall 2013, MWF 1:00-2:00 CAS 229 Office hours: MW 10:30-12:00 and by appointment

History of the Jews in the Modern World HI 219 Fall 2013, MWF 1:00-2:00 CAS 229 Office hours: MW 10:30-12:00 and by appointment History of the Jews in the Modern World HI 219 Fall 2013, MWF 1:00-2:00 CAS 229 Office hours: MW 10:30-12:00 and by appointment Prof. Simon Rabinovitch srabinov@bu.edu Office hours: 226 Bay State Road,

More information

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies DEGREE OPTIONS 1. Master of Religious Education 2. Master of Theological Studies 1. Master of Religious Education Purpose: The Master of Religious Education degree program (M.R.E.) is designed to equip

More information

Recommended Michael Meyer, The Origins of the Modern Jew. David Vital, A People Apart: The Jews of Europe,

Recommended Michael Meyer, The Origins of the Modern Jew. David Vital, A People Apart: The Jews of Europe, Modern History of the Jews AS/HIST 3860.06 2009-10 Tuesday and Thursday, 10-11.20 Prof. K Weiser, ext. 20200 kweiser@yorku.ca Office hours, 242 Vanier College, Wednesday 2.30-3.30 or by appointment Course

More information

FOURTH GRADE. WE LIVE AS CHRISTIANS ~ Your child recognizes that the Holy Spirit gives us life and that the Holy Spirit gives us gifts.

FOURTH GRADE. WE LIVE AS CHRISTIANS ~ Your child recognizes that the Holy Spirit gives us life and that the Holy Spirit gives us gifts. FOURTH GRADE RELIGION LIVING AS CATHOLIC CHRISTIANS ~ Your child recognizes that Jesus preached the Good News. understands the meaning of the Kingdom of God. knows virtues of Faith, Hope, Love. recognizes

More information

Introduction to Modern Jewish History. JEWISH STUDIES/HISTORY 220 MWF 11-11:50am Classroom: Education L185

Introduction to Modern Jewish History. JEWISH STUDIES/HISTORY 220 MWF 11-11:50am Classroom: Education L185 Introduction to Modern Jewish History JEWISH STUDIES/HISTORY 220 MWF 11-11:50am Classroom: Education L185 Instructor: Dr. Wobick-Segev Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays, 12:00pm-1:00pm Office: Humanities

More information

School of Divinity. Divinity & 2000 Level /9 - August Divinity (DI) modules. DI1001 Theology: Issues and History

School of Divinity. Divinity & 2000 Level /9 - August Divinity (DI) modules. DI1001 Theology: Issues and History School of Divinity Divinity (DI) modules DI1001 Theology: Issues and History 10.00 am Mon, Tue, Thu This module will address a variety of themes within Christian theology. Each theme will be approached

More information

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT (If submission is not text, cite appropriate resource(s))

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT (If submission is not text, cite appropriate resource(s)) Prentice Hall Literature Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes Copper Level 2005 District of Columbia Public Schools, English Language Arts Standards (Grade 6) STRAND 1: LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT Grades 6-12: Students

More information

Prentice Hall United States History Survey Edition 2013

Prentice Hall United States History Survey Edition 2013 A Correlation of Prentice Hall Survey Edition 2013 Table of Contents Grades 9-10 Reading Standards... 3 Writing Standards... 10 Grades 11-12 Reading Standards... 18 Writing Standards... 25 2 Reading Standards

More information

Philosophy. Aim of the subject

Philosophy. Aim of the subject Philosophy FIO Philosophy Philosophy is a humanistic subject with ramifications in all areas of human knowledge and activity, since it covers fundamental issues concerning the nature of reality, the possibility

More information

Jewish Studies Fall 2017 Course Descriptions

Jewish Studies Fall 2017 Course Descriptions Jewish Studies Fall 2017 Course Descriptions COMPARATIVE LITERARY STUDIES (COMP_LIT) COMP_LIT 279-0-20: Modern Jewish Literature in Translation M. Gealy, MWF 11:00 11:50 (See JWSH_ST 279 for description)

More information

PHILOSOPHY-PHIL (PHIL)

PHILOSOPHY-PHIL (PHIL) Philosophy-PHIL (PHIL) 1 PHILOSOPHY-PHIL (PHIL) Courses PHIL 100 Appreciation of Philosophy (GT-AH3) Credits: 3 (3-0-0) Basic issues in philosophy including theories of knowledge, metaphysics, ethics,

More information

ADDITIONAL ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

ADDITIONAL ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES ACADEMIC PROGRAMS INTRODUCTION GENERAL EDUCATION ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT BIBLE AND THEOLOGY DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT PRACTICAL MINISTRIES DEPARTMENT PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT TEACHER EDUCATION DEPARTMENT

More information

Chao Center for Asian Studies

Chao Center for Asian Studies Chao Center for Asian Studies The School of Humanities and the School of Social Sciences Di r e c t o r Tani E. Barlow Associate Directors Mahmoud El-Gamal Steven W. Lewis Elora Shehabuddin Pr o f e s

More information

CLASS RULES (1) Cell phones must be turned off in both lecture and section. (2) NO AUDIO OR VIDEO RECORDING IS PERMITTED AT ANY TIME.

CLASS RULES (1) Cell phones must be turned off in both lecture and section. (2) NO AUDIO OR VIDEO RECORDING IS PERMITTED AT ANY TIME. HISTORY 17B HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, 1830-1920 UCSB DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY PROFESSOR GIULIANA PERRONE Winter 2018 gperrone@ucsb.edu MWF 11am-12pm Office Hours: M 4-5, T 2-3 & by appointment IV Theater

More information

Anti-Semitism and History HST Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 212 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Spring 2012

Anti-Semitism and History HST Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 212 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Spring 2012 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny Phone: 910-962-7580 Email: tannyj@uncw.edu Web: http://people.uncw.edu/tannyj/ Office: Morton 254 Office hours: Monday, 1-2pm Wednesday, 2-3pm Friday, 12-1pm Or by appointment

More information

An Interview with. Michelle Cohen Corasanti. Conducted by Ajit Kumar

An Interview with. Michelle Cohen Corasanti. Conducted by Ajit Kumar ISSN 2249-4529 Lapis Lazuli An International Literary Journal (LLILJ) Vol.4 / NO.2/Autumn 2014 An Interview with Michelle Cohen Corasanti Conducted by Ajit Kumar Michelle Cohen Corasanti was born in 1966

More information

YIDDISH THEATER: A LOVE STORY

YIDDISH THEATER: A LOVE STORY YIDDISH THEATER: A LOVE STORY A FILM BY DAN KATZIR Film opens in NYC on NOV. 21. at the Pioneer Theater Film opens in L.A. on NOV. 30 at the Laemmle Grande Theater Publicity Contact: Sasha Berman Shotwell

More information

Charles University, Faculty of Arts East and Central European Studies. Summer Jewish Images in Central European Cinema CUFA F 380

Charles University, Faculty of Arts East and Central European Studies. Summer Jewish Images in Central European Cinema CUFA F 380 Instructor: Email: Office Hours: Charles University, Faculty of Arts East and Central European Studies Summer 2016 Jewish Images in Central European Cinema Kevin Johnson CUFA F 380 kbjohnson1138@gmail.com

More information

LANGUAGES HEBREW. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

LANGUAGES HEBREW. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Department of Jewish Studies 12 College Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Tel: (732) 932-2033 Fax: (732) 932-3052 e-mail: jsdept@rci.rutgers.edu website: http://jewishstudies.rutgers.edu UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

More information

Department of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy The University of Alabama at Birmingham 1 Department of Philosophy Chair: Dr. Gregory Pence The Department of Philosophy offers the Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in philosophy, as well as a minor

More information

Rodef Shalom clergy will begin each class with a short discussion that relates to the theme.

Rodef Shalom clergy will begin each class with a short discussion that relates to the theme. Class Title: Jewish Life in the Baltic States and Belarus Instructor: Christine Beresniova Format: 5 class sessions; 1.5 hours each Dates: July 21, July 28, August 4, August 11, August 18 Time: TBD Overview:

More information

Curriculum Project. notion of The Many and the One in terms of religious and ethnic diversity amidst a unifying

Curriculum Project. notion of The Many and the One in terms of religious and ethnic diversity amidst a unifying Colleen Eddy The Many and The One NEH Institute 26 July 2010 Curriculum Project Teaching Context The students of Oakton High School in Vienna, Virginia would likely identify with the notion of The Many

More information

Master of Arts Course Descriptions

Master of Arts Course Descriptions Bible and Theology Master of Arts Course Descriptions BTH511 Dynamics of Kingdom Ministry (3 Credits) This course gives students a personal and Kingdom-oriented theology of ministry, demonstrating God

More information

Why send your child to Peretz when there are so many other great Hebrew schools in Vancouver?

Why send your child to Peretz when there are so many other great Hebrew schools in Vancouver? Peretz B nei Mitzvah Program (Bar and Bat Mitzvah) Introduction and Overview Why send your child to Peretz when there are so many other great Hebrew schools in Vancouver? There are a lot of reasons why

More information