HBR 4930 / JST4936: Introduction to Israeli Culture

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HBR 4930 / JST4936: Introduction to Israeli Culture Instructor Dr. Dror Abend-David Meetings T Period 4 R Periods 4-5 Room MAT 0113 Office Pugh 337 Office Hours M W F, 5 th Period Email d.abend.1@alumni.nyu.edu Phone 352-846-3845 Course Description: This course will feature a survey of Israeli Literature, Drama, Art, Photography and Cinema. It will address facets of Israeli society that are seldom discussed in the media or associated with the prevailing image of this society. Along with the various texts that we will read, a number of serious discussions will take place in class about the nature of Israeli culture: Jewish vs. Zionist (and Israeli non-jewish) identities; the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict; secular and religious societies; gender; and the function of Art and Literature in Israeli society. In addition, we will consider the relationship between Israeli and American (and Jewish-American) cultures. To what extent is Israel an offshoot of American culture? And in what ways is it very different? Required Materials: Sobol, Joshua, Ghetto. Hern: US. 1989. [Ordered through the bookstore as Plays of the Holocaust, edited by Elinor Fuchs]. Kashua, Sayed, Let it be Morning. Translated from Hebrew by Miriam Shlesinger. Grove/Atlantic: New York, NY. 2004. [Available electronically from Google books for $8.80]. The remaining texts will be made available on e-learn: Adonis, al-qasim, and Darwish, Victims of a Map, Tr. Abdullah al-udhari, London : Al Saqi Books: Distributed by Zed Press, 1984. Bialik, Chaim Nachman, To A bird. In C.N. Bialik: Selected Poems, Overlook TP: US, 2005. 26. Bluwstein, Rachel, El artsi, Davar (musaf), August 27, 1926, 1. Chetrit, Sami Shalom, Revisiting Bialik: A Radical Mizrahi Reading of the Jewish National Poet. Comparative Literature 62:1. 2010. 1-20. Hofshteyn, Dovid, Baderekh, Haarets, May 14, 1925, 5. Leibowitz, Yeshayahu, Judaism, Human Values, and the Jewish State [an excerpt], Tr. Goldman and Navon, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992. Manor, Dalia, The Dancing Jew and Other Characters: Art in the Jewish Settlement in Palestine During the 1920s. Journal of Modern Jewish Studies. 1:1. May 2002. 73-89. Oz, Amos, Panther in the Basement, Mariner Books: US, 1998. Roth, Lynn (Dir.). The Little Traitor [a film based on a book by Amos Oz]. Evanstone Films. 2007. Shohat, Ella, Israeli Cinema: East / West and the Politics of Representation. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. 1989. 1

Requirements: Grades (1) Class participation, including short weekly assignments (20%); (2) Written assignments (20%); (3) Midterm paper (30%); (4) Final paper (30%) Grading Scale 100-93 A A - 4.0 90-92 A- A- - 3.67 87-89 B+ B+- 3.33 83-86 B B - 3.0 80-82 B- B- - 2.67 77-79 C+ C+ -2.33 73-76 C C - 2.0 70-72 C- C- - 1.67 67-69 D+ D+ -1.33 63-66 D D - 1.0 60-62 D- D- -0.67 S-U 73% E 0, WF 0, I 0, NG 0, SU - 0 Academic Honesty. Students are expected to follow Academic Honesty Guidelines. These can be found at http://www.aa.ufl.edu/aa/rules/4017.htm Students may also wish to consult The Student Guide Standard of Ethical Conduct found at http://www.dso.ufl.edu/stg/ Students are also expected to follow the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures Academic Honesty Guidelines: Academic honesty and integrity are fundamental values of the University community. An academic honesty offense is defined as the act of lying, cheating, or stealing academic information so that one gains academic advantage. Any individual who becomes aware of a violation of the Honor Code is bound by honor to take corrective action. Violations of the Academic Honesty Guidelines include but are not limited to: Cheating. The improper taking or tendering of any information or material which shall be used to determine academic credit. Taking of information includes copying graded homework assignments from another student; working with another individual(s) on graded assignments or homework; looking or attempting to look at notes, a text, or another student's paper during an exam. Plagiarism. The attempt to represent the work of another as the product of one's own thought, whether the other's work is oral or written (including electronic), published or unpublished. Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to, quoting oral or written materials without citation on written materials or in oral presentations; submitting work produced by an online translation service or the translation feature of an online dictionary as your own. 2

Misrepresentation. Any act or omission with intent to deceive a teacher for academic advantage. Misrepresentation includes lying to a teacher to increase your grade; lying or misrepresenting facts when confronted with an allegation of academic honesty. Bribery, Conspiracy, Fabrication. For details see website below. The UF Honor Code states: We, the members of the community, pledge to hold ourselves and our peers to the highest standards of honesty and integrity. On all work submitted for credit the following pledge is either required or implied: On my honor, I have neither given nor received unauthorized aid in doing this assignment. Violations of this policy will result in disciplinary action according to the judicial process. For more details go to: http://www.aa.ufl.edu/aa/rules/4017.htm Students with Disabilities. Students requesting classroom accommodation must first register with the Dean of Students Office. The Dean of Students Office will provide documentation to the student who must then provide this documentation to the Instructor when requesting accommodation. 3

Spring 2015 Calendar ANT/HBR 4930 / JST4936 Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday I 01.06 Introduction 01.07 01.08 Bialik and Chetrit 01.09 II 01.12 01.13 Bluwstein and Hofstein III 01.19 Martin Luther King Jr. Day 01.20 Oz - Book First Written 01.14 01.15 Oz - Book 01.21 01.22 Oz - Film 01.16 01.23 IV 01.26 01.27 Avidan and Eliot V 02.02 02.03 Sobol Second Written VI 02.09 02.10 Introduction to Israeli Art VII 02.16 02.17 Wallach 02.23 02.24 VIII Sohat Midterm Paper Due IX 03.02 03.03 Spring Break Spring Break X 03.09 03.10 Adonis, al- Qasim, and Darwish XI 03.16 03.17 Conference XII 03.23 03.24 Mandel 01.28 01.29 Leibowitz 02.04 02.05 Sobol 02.11 02.12 Introduction to Israeli Photography 02.18 02.19 Manor 02.25 02.26 Film 03.04 03.05 Spring Break Spring Break 03.11 03.12 Adonis, al- Qasim, and Darwish 03.18 03.29 Kashua Third Written 03.25 03.26 Israeli poetry written in 01.30 02.06 02.13 02.20 02.27 03.06 Spring Break 03.13 03.20 03.27 4

XIII XIV 03.30 03.31 Introduction to Israeli Television Fourth Written 04.06 04.09 Television Programs XV 04.14 04.15 Israeli and Jewish American Relations XVI 04.21 04.22 Discussion and Conclusion Final Paper Due English 04.01 04.02 Passover 04.10 04.11 Israeli and Jewish American Relations 04.16 04.17 Discussion and Conclusion 04.03 Passover 04.12 04.18 5