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

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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, Room 209, tel. 353-9915 http://blogs.bu.edu/srabinov Course Outline This course is a survey of the history of the Jews in the modern world, with an emphasis on European Jewry. We will examine Jewish interaction with non-jewish society from medieval Spain to Europe, Israel, and the United States today and explore this relationship s creative and destructive products. We will focus in particular on how Jewish society, culture, religious practice, and political definition changed in relation to how Europe, and the world, became modern. European states and societies changed through a variety of processes we now associate with modernity such as urbanization, industrialization, state centralization, and the development nationalism and secularism. Many of the key issues we discuss in this course therefore stem from the bigger question of how changes in European society over the past 250-300 years affected the Jews. The following are a few of the topics we will discuss: Jewish religious and communal changes in the late-medieval and early modern period How different European states sought to integrate their Jewish populations How Jews sought to adapt to the demands of the modern state The development of new forms of Jewish culture Modern antisemitism The development of Jewish nationalism The world wars Soviet, American, and Israeli Jewries Course Websites All required texts not for purchase, numbered primary source packs (see schedule below), assignments, handouts from class, and any essential course documents will be available on Blackboard. I will maintain a facebook page for the course where I ll post interesting contemporary news and multimedia. Students are encouraged to like the page and to post materials and comments (please, keep it civil). The facebook page can be accessed from the Teaching page of my website, blogs.bu.edu/srabinov/teaching/. 1

Students are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the writing and research guides and other multimedia on the Student Resources page of my site blogs.bu.edu/srabinov/student-research-resources/. Student research guides are hosted and posted on the site blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory. Students are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the page For Students on that site, as well as the many research guides already on the site. Course Requirements The class format mixes lecture with class discussion. You will be given enough time to read the texts and it is expected that you come to class having done so. Your final grade will be determined as follows: 2-3 page book review, 10%. Each student is responsible for reviewing one book of their choosing from the bibliographies of suggested further readings in the textbook, from chapter 7 onward. I recommend that students run their selection by me well in advance of the due date. Reviews written on books not in one of the textbook s bibliographies (again, chapter 7 onward) will not be graded. The book review is due October 9. Midterm examination, 20%. To be held in-class on October 18. The examination will be open-book and you will be given a preparation guide ahead of time. Online research guide, 20%. You will write an online research guide (essentially a multimedia annotated bibliography) on a topic pertinent to the class. I will provide more detailed instructions and help you get started. Research guides will be published on the website http://blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory and will form the groundwork for your term paper. For the purpose of grading your guide will be considered complete on November 15, though you will be free to continue to update and upgrade your guide thereafter. Term paper, 25%. Students must complete one research paper (+/- 8-10 pages) examining some aspect of Jewish history pertinent to the course. Topics might cover political, religious, intellectual, cultural, social, or economic history and should correspond approximately to the topic of your research guide. I will frequently suggest topics during the course of the semester and students are encouraged to come to my office to discuss possibilities. Both the syllabus and the bibliographies in the textbook are good places to start your search for a topic. The term paper is due December 6. Final take-home examination, 25%. The final examination will be distributed on the last day of class and will be due at a specified time during the final examination period. Class discussion and preparation. Attendance and informed participation in class discussion is required. Although a grade will not be allocated for participation, in the case of final grades which are borderline good participation may boost a student s grade. Prolonged absence is grounds for failure. 2

All assignments should be completed independently and plagiarism from any source is unacceptable. Cases of suspected academic misconduct will be referred to the Dean s Office. If they have not already, students should familiarize themselves with the Academic Conduct Code of the College of Arts and Sciences: http://www.bu.edu/cas/students/undergrad-resources/code/ Texts Required and available at BU Barnes and Noble Bookstore: John Efron et al, The Jews: A History (Pearson, 2009). [Efron in syllabus] All other required readings for the course will be available through our Blackboard website (indicated with a * in the syllabus). Students may benefit from purchasing several of the books we use from an online retailer. I would recommend purchasing the following three books in particular because they are excellent references and are also fairly inexpensive and easy to acquire. Paul Mendes-Flohr and Jehuda Reinharz eds., The Jew in the Modern World: A Documentary History, 2 nd ed. (Oxford, 1995). [JMW in syllabus] David Biale ed., Cultures of the Jews: A New History (Schocken, 2002). This book can be purchased in three separate volumes or in a single three-volume edition. [Cultures of the Jews in syllabus] Michael Brenner, A Short History of the Jews, Jeremiah Riemer trans. (Princeton, 2010). [Brenner in syllabus] Course Schedule and Assignments The course schedule is divided by weeks. In most cases readings have been specified by class, but in some cases readings are indicated for the week as a whole. It is your responsibility to read the syllabus regularly and to know where we are in the readings. Part I Jewish Society from Medieval to Modern Week 1 - Introduction September 4 Introduction to the course When does modern Jewish history begin? Did it end? The end of the Jewish people, aka The Great Jewcy Debate September 6 no class Week 2 Jews in Medieval Europe 3

September 9 Sepharad and Ashkenaz: How the Jews got where and why? Efron, p. 178. September 11 Judaism and Jewish society in medieval Ashkenaz Efron, chapter 7. September 13 Jews, Christians, and Muslims in medieval Spain Efron, chapter 8. Week 3 Jews in the Early Modern World Readings for the week: Efron, chapter 9. Brenner, chapter 9.* September 16 The Sephardic Diaspora September 18 The Jews in early modern Poland-Lithuania September 20 Judaism and Jewish society in early modern Europe Part II Jews and the Modern State, the Modern State and the Jews Week 4 Enlightenment and Revolution September 23 The Enlightenment and the Jews Amos Elon, The Pity of it All: A Portrait of the German-Jewish Epoch (New York, 2002), 1-64.* September 25 The idea of Jewish Enlightenment Efron, 269-284. September 27 The French Revolution Primary source pack 1 (selections from JMW).* Week 5 Franco-German Rivalry 4

September 30 Napoleonic Europe Efron, chapter 10. October 2 Jewish Emancipation in Central Europe Primary source pack 2 (selections from JMW).* October 4 no class Week 6 The Jews in Eastern Europe October 7 Prussian Poland and Austrian Galicia Israel Bartal and Antony Polonsky, Introduction: The Jews of Galicia under the Habsburgs, in Polin 12 (1999): 3-24.* Sophie Kemlein, The Jewish Community in the Grand Duchy of Poznań under Prussian Rule, 1815-1848. Polin 14 (2001): 49-67.* October 9 The Russian Empire the Kingdom of Poland Theodore Weeks, From Assimilation to Antisemitism: The Jewish Question in Poland, 1850-1914 (Dekalb, 2006), 33-70.* October 11 The Russian Empire the Pale of Settlement and beyond Michael Stanislawski, Russian Jewry, the Russian State, and the Dynamics of Jewish Emancipation, in Birnbaum and Katznelson eds. Paths of Emancipation (Princeton, 1995).* Week 7 Jews of the Ottoman Empire and Southeastern Europe October 14 no class October 15 substitute Monday Ottoman and Turkish Jewry Aron Rodrigue, The Ottoman Diaspora: The Rise and Fall of Ladino Literary Culture, in Cultures of the Jews.* Aron Rodrigue, From Millet to Minority: Turkish Jewry, in Paths of Emancipation in Birnbaum and Katznelson eds. Paths of Emancipation (Princeton, 1995).* October 16 The Jews in southeastern Europe Esther Benbassa and Aron Rodrigue, Sephardi Jewry (Berkeley, 2000), chapter 3.* 5

October 18 Midterm examination Week 8 Religious Responses to Modernity Readings for the week: Efron, chapter 11. Maud Mandel, Assimilation and Cultural Exchange in Modern Jewish History, in Jeremy Cohen and Moshe Rosman eds. Rethinking European Jewish History (2009), 72-92.* Primary source pack 3 (selections from The Golden Tradition and JMW).* October 21 The emergence of Hasidism October 23 Progressive Judaism and Orthodoxy October 25 Assimilation and acculturation Section III Jews and the Fin-de-Siècle Week 9 Anti-Judaism and Antisemitism October 28 Antisemitism in Central Europe Efron, 298-308. October 30 Anti-Jewish violence in the Russian Empire Efron, 309-313. November 1 The question of migration: the United States Efron, 326-332. Paula Hyman, Gender and the Immigrant Jewish Experience in the United States, in Judith Baskin ed., Jewish Women in Historical Perspective 2 nd ed. (Detroit, 1998), 312-336.* Week 10 New Challenges, New Politics November 4 The emergence of Jewish nationalism Efron, 313-326. 6

Shlomo Avineri, The Making of Modern Zionism: The Intellectual Origins of the Jewish State (New York, 1981), 3-13, 88-100, 112-124.* November 6 Jews, socialism, and Jewish socialism Primary source pack 4 (Chaim Zhitlovsky and Vladimir Medem in The Golden Tradition and Jews and Diaspora Nationalism).* November 8 The question of migration: the Yishuv Primary source pack 5 (selections from The Zionist Idea and The Origins of Israel).* Week 11 War, Revolution, and the Creation of Soviet Jewry November 11 World War I and the Jews Amos Elon, The Pity of it All, 297-354* Jehuda Reinharz, The Balfour Declaration in Historical Perspective, in Essential Papers on Zionism (NYU, 1996), 587-616.* Primary source pack 6 (selection from S. Ansky, The Enemy at his Pleasure: A Journey Through the Jewish Pale of Settlement During World War I.).* November 13 Empires into nation states: Jews in a reconstructed Europe Efron, chapter 13. November 15 The Creation of Soviet Jewry Zvi Gitelman, A Century of Ambivalence: The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union, 1881 to the Present 2 nd ed. (Indiana, 2001), chapter 2.* Part IV Catastrophe and Rebirth Week 12 (and Monday of Thanksgiving week) Europe and America between the Wars November 18 Film and discussion: American matchmaker Stephen J. Whitfield, Declarations of Independence: American Jewish Culture in the Twentieth Century, in Cultures of the Jews.* November 20 Film and discussion continued: American matchmaker November 22 7

Interwar Poland and the Baltics Primary source pack 6 (selections from JMW and Polish Minorities Treaty).* November 25 Soviet Jewry Zvi Gitelman, A Century of Ambivalence, chapter 3.* November 27 and 29 Thanksgiving Week 13 - Upheaval Readings for the week: Efron, chapter 14. Brenner, chapter 19.* Michael Marrus, The Holocaust in History (New York, 1987), 31-83.* December 2 The Holocaust and World War II December 4 The Holocaust and World War II December 6 Postwar Europe Week 14 The Creation of Israel and Postwar America December 9 Israel and America Efron, chapter 15. Primary source pack 6 ( Excerpts from a Correspondence between David Ben- Gurion and Simon Rawidowicz on the State of Israel, the Diaspora, and the Unity of the Jewish People ).* December 11 Last day of class the end of the Jewish people? The Great Jewcy Debate revisited Gerson Cohen, The Blessing of Assimilation in Jewish History, in Jewish History and Jewish Destiny (JTSA Press, 1997).* 8