HON 383: Responses to the Holocaust

Similar documents
FALL 2015 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS OCTOBER MAURICE GREENBERG CENTER FOR JUDAIC STUDIES. Fall Focus: Rediscovering the Past, Envisioning the Future

SPRING 2018 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS. Celebrating the Opening of the New Greenberg Center Location MAURICE GREENBERG CENTER FOR JUDAIC STUDIES

THIS IS A TENTATIVE SYLLABUS. CHANGES MAY BE MADE

University of Haifa Weiss-Livnat International MA Program in Holocaust Studies

Class Location: (050) s: (03)

New Areas of Holocaust Research

Ginsburg Ingerman Overseas Students Program Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

CURRICULUM VITAE. Personal Information: Education Certificates and Degrees. Academic Teaching Positions: Publications: Dr.

Assignments The course s written assignments consist of a map exercise, a document assignment paper, reading responses, and a final examination.

בית הספר לתלמידי חו"ל

Holocaust and Genocide Studies Courses Updated 11/15/2012

NEJS 132b. Against the Apocalypse: Jewish Responses to the Holocaust

Their Brother s Keepers: Rescuers and Righteous Gentiles History OL Jennifer L. Marlow

HIDDEN IN THUNDER: Perspectives on Faith, Halachah and Leadership during the Holocaust

Soviet Jewish Soldiers, Jewish Resistance, during the Holocaust

JEWS IN THE MODERN WORLD: HISTORY OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION III Spring History 141/Jewish Studies 158/Religious Studies 122/NELC 053

New Perspectives on Kristallnacht: After 80 Years, the Nazi Pogrom in Global Comparison

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

Course Introduction Learning Objectives:

TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST THROUGH THE ART OF MIRIAM BRYSK

HIS 71 "Holocaust--The Destruction of European Jewry"

JEWS IN THE MODERN WORLD: HISTORY OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION III Spring History 141/Jewish Studies 158/Religious Studies 122/NELC 053

Poland- WARSAW Ghetto Archives (Emanuel Ringelblum Archives) - Witness to the Holocaust -

The Challenge of Memory - Video Testimonies and Holocaust Education by Jan Darsa

Holocaust Webquest Packet

THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI RESEARCH CENTER-KANSAS CITY

Ginsburg Ingerman Overseas Students Program Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

The University of North Carolina at Greensboro HIS 392- The Holocaust: History and Meaning. Here there is no why. - Primo Levi DESCRIPTION

Schoen Consulting US Canada Holocaust Survey Comparison October 2018 General Awareness - Open Ended Questions

Lifelong Learning Jewish Studies Courses and Events ISj4134 LLL Jewish studies AW.indd 1 08/07/ :00

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

Course Syllabus. Course Information Course Number/Section HIST Professor Contact Information Professor

University of Florida Spring Semester JST 3930 section 0976 / EUH 1249

Daniel Reiser Higher Education Awards and Fellowships

The Last Jew Of Treblinka: A Survivor's Memory, By Chil Rajchman READ ONLINE

Rosen Lectures Amy-Jill Levine Of Pearls and Prodigals: Listening to Jesus the Jewish Storyteller

Texts: The course will use three textbooks:

Name: Hour: Night by Elie Wiesel Background Information

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

This seminar is funded by the generosity of the Sheldon Adelson Foundation.

PURDUE UNIVERSITY School of Interdisciplinary Studies Jewish Studies

FROM MEMORIALS TO INVALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENTATION: USING YIZKOR BOOKS AS RESOURCES FOR STUDYING A VANISHED WORLD. Michlean J.

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

NEWSLETTER ! CVHEN HOLOCAUST LIBRARY AND RESOURCE CENTER HOURS: Spring 2017

Unit Four: Jewish Resistance

THE FACE OF THE GHETTO. Open Hearts Closed TEACHER S GUIDE. Pictures Taken by Jewish Photographers in the Litzmannstadt Ghetto

Chiune Sugihara: The Japanese Schindler. Troy Kawahara Individual Website Senior Division

Teaching the Holocaust: Voices from Tennessee Agenda United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in cooperation with The Tennessee Holocaust Commission

Introduction to Judaism Fall 2011 Hebrew and Semitic Studies 211 Jewish Studies 211 Religious Studies 211

RLST 221: Judaism. Spring 2013 Tu Th 9:40 11:00 am LA 342

The Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland says most of the cemeteries are in an advanced state of neglect

HOLOCAUST AND TRAUMA LITERATURE

The Pedagogical Approach to Teaching the Holocaust

The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous. Żegota Council for the Aid to Jews

GCE. Religious Studies. Mark Scheme for June Advanced GCE Unit G589: Judaism. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

2017 Poland Personally Seminar

Spring 2018 Event Schedule

Before we begin, I would like to convey regrets from our president Ronald S. Lauder.

History 219: The American Jewish Experience: From Shtetl to Suburb

Identification of the levels at which the course can be taken: Audit, Certificate, Basic (Diploma/MA/M.Div) or Advanced (Th.M).

KMS Poland Trip - Summer Pricing, Itinerary & Other Information

HI290/IR 350: HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SINCE Lecture: Tuesday, Thursday, 2:00-3:20 P.M. REQUIRED READINGS

Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies UCHS

Modern East European Jewish History,

Jewish History II: Jews in the Modern World

DOCUMENTARY CHRONICLES SEARCH FOR FAMILY'S ART LOST IN HOLOCAUST

JEWISH STUDIES. College of Liberal & Creative Arts. Professor. Program Scope. Assistant Professor. Lecturer. Major. Minor

DOWNLOAD OR READ : CHILDREN OF THE HOLOCAUST JEWISH LIVES CHILDREN OF THE JACARANDA TREE PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

FROM THE FOLLOWING FINE PUBLISHERS DISTRIBUTED IN CANADA BY SCHOLARLY BOOK SERVICES INC.:

Jewish Folk Literature Professor Haya Bar-Itzhak

Introduction to Jewish Studies JWST/WCL 2380 Dr. Caryn Tamber-Rosenau T/Th 1-2:30 p.m. C (Roy Cullen) 112

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

CJS 430 Testimonies and Cultural Expressions of the Holocaust. Course Description

JEWISH STUDIES (JWST)

speaking of the growth of scholarship by non-jews in Eastern Europe, observes: When you look at what Jewish Studies looks like in Europe, the

CIEE in Ferrara, Italy

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archives

ways to find these community members who could bring the teaching of justice outside the walls of the classroom.

FALL 2015 COURSES ENGLISH LANGUAGES & CULTURES HISTORY JEWISH STUDIES PHILOSOPHY RELIGIOUS STUDIES SOCIOLOGY

Discovering the Holocaust

Department of Theology. Module Descriptions 2018/19

"We Are Here": New Approaches To Jewish Displaced Persons In Postwar Germany (Non-Series)

The Big Read in New Rochelle One City, One Book 2009 The Shawl, by Cynthia Ozick. Programs and Exhibition

Anti-Jewish Legislation (Laws)

The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish Evangelism

About Michael Berenbaum

Pedro Gonzalez PhD Candidate, History of Ideas

GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA

Special Collections and University Archives UMass Amherst Libraries 154 Hicks Way : Amherst, Mass

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

Course Offerings

Polin Meeting Point Summer Educational School 2016 July 17-31, Warsaw

Department of Jewish Studies

Ori Yehudai Curriculum vitae

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

History 219: The American Jewish Experience: From Shtetl to Suburb University of Wisconsin, Madison Fall 2015 M W F: 1:20 2:10 (Science 180)

English I Honors. 5. Summarize the story Moshe the Beadle tells on his return from being deported. Why does he say he has returned to Sighet?

Tour to Eastern Europe

Course Syllabus. Course Information. Course Number/Section HIST Term Spring Location JO Professor Contact Information

Introduction to the Holocaust

Transcription:

1 Avinoam J. Patt Honors Seminar: Responses to the Holocaust Fall 2013 MW, 2:55-4:10pm patt@hartford.edu HON 383: Responses to the Holocaust COURSE DESCRIPTION This seminar explores both Jewish and non-jewish responses to the Holocaust in an interdisciplinary manner through an examination of social, religious, theological, political, cultural, psychological, and literary responses to the Holocaust both during and after the Second World War. The seminar (1) focuses attention on the diversity of human responses to Nazi persecution, both Jewish and non-jewish, and (2) facilitates a deeper understanding of the manner in which individuals and communities respond to extreme persecution in war and genocide both contemporaneously and in its aftermath. Students will examine the ways Jews sought to maintain religious observance under Nazi occupation, the moral and ethical dilemmas Jews confronted daily during the war, the manner in which resistance transcended narrowly defined armed resistance to encompass cases of spiritual, cultural, psychological, and philosophical resistance to persecution, attempts to document and historicize the war both under occupation and in its aftermath, the meaning of memory and memorialization, the use of literature and cultural creations as forms of resistance, the nature of psychological responses to trauma and persecution, and theological and religious explanations of the meaning of the Holocaust in its aftermath. Questions that will frame seminar discussions include: to what extent were contemporary Jewish religious responses conditioned by prior Jewish experience and tradition? What moral and ethical dilemmas confronted Jews in the effort to maintain Jewish life under Nazi persecution? How can an interdisciplinary examination of responses to persecution expand our definition of resistance both in the Holocaust and in other historical contexts? How have philosophers and theologians engaged with the meaning of the Holocaust and with its implications for Judaism and Jewish identity? In what ways can the study of religion, theology, literature, culture, psychology, and the study of history inform one another? Students will engage in textual study using a variety of sources, including rabbinic responsa, diaries, sermons, literary texts, journals, films, newspapers, testimonies, and more. Discussions and seminar sessions will address themes of Jewish family life, Jewish ethics, leadership efforts, community preservation, moral deliberation, postwar religious observance, Holocaust memorialization, and Jewish and Christian theology after the Holocaust.

2 Writing Assignments, Class presentations and/or Other Creative or Media Assignments: 1. Weekly reaction papers Weekly reaction papers will be posted to the Blackboard discussion space based on the class readings and discussions; these will be counted towards your participation grade. 2. Midterm document analysis and exercise. 3. 2 Short Book critiques. 4-5 page book reviews on two selected longer texts. 4. Interview project with child of Holocaust survivors and presentation to be presented in final week of class. 5. Final paper assignment. Expectations about Student Independent Research: Students will conduct research for writing a longer 10-12 page paper on a selected area of Jewish responses to the Holocaust. Selection of research project will be conducted in conjunction with professor. Students will be expected to conduct research using both primary and secondary resources. Paper topics, thesis, outline, and research will be evaluated by professor over the course of the semester. Students will be expected to demonstrate both critical thinking and analytical skills in research and writing of paper. Grading Policy: 1. Weekly reaction papers (20%) 2. Midterm document analysis and exercise. (15%) 3. 2 Short Book critiques. 4-5 page book reviews on two selected longer texts (25%). 4. Interview Project (20%) 5. Final paper assignment and presentation to be presented in final week of class. (20%) Readings: Saul Friedlander, Nazi Germany and the Jews: 1933-1945 (abridged edition, March 2009, 978-0061350276) Roskies and Diamant, Holocaust Literature (January 2013, 978-1611683585) Zvi Kolitz, Yossel Rakover Speaks to God (Hoboken: Ktav Publishing House, 1995). Patt and Berkowitz, We are Here: New Approaches to Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Germany (Wayne State University Press, 2009) 978-0814333501 Edward Lewis Wallant, The Pawnbroker (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 978-0156714228) Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz, (Touchstone, 1995; 978-0684826806) Art Spiegelman, The Complete Maus (978-0141014081) **Any readings marked with an asterisk will be posted to blackboard.

3 SCHEDULE OF COURSE TOPICS, READINGS AND ASSIGNMENTS -please complete all assigned readings before scheduled classes. Week 1 INTRODUCTION TO THE HOLOCAUST, PART I *David Engel, The Holocaust: The Third Reich and the Jews (excerpts) Saul Friedlander, Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939-1945: The Years of Extermination, p. 1-140. 9/4, first class 9/9 Week 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE HOLOCAUST, PART II *David Engel, The Holocaust: The Third Reich and the Jews Saul Friedlander, Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939-1945: The Years of Extermination, p. 141-end of book. -view testimonies from http://sfi.usc.edu/explore and Fortunoff Video Archive at Yale University http://www.library.yale.edu/testimonies/index.html 9/11 9/16 and 9/18 Week 3 JEWISH and NON-JEWISH RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST a conceptual overview *Isaiah Trunk, Jewish Responses to the Holocaust (introduction) Garbarini, Patt, et al, Jewish Reactions to Persecution, 1938-1940, introduction and excerpts 9/23 **attend exhibition opening, Genocide: Israel Charny and the Scourge of the Twentieth Century (Museum of Jewish Civilization) 9/25 Week 4 JEWISH RESPONSES IN THE WARSAW, LODZ AND VILNA GHETTOS Ringelblum, Huberband, and the Oneg Shabbes Archive Documenting the Holocaust *Shimon Huberband, Kiddush Hashem: Jewish Religious and Cultural Life in Poland during the Holocaust (New York: Yeshiva University Press, 1987) Introduction and Part III, Jewish Religious Life in Nazi-Occupied Europe *Sam Kassow, Who Will Write Our History: Emanuel Ringelblum, the Warsaw Ghetto, and the Oyneg Shabbes Archive http://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/files/pt-articles/pt43ringelblum.pdf -Selected Documents from Ringelblum Oneg Shabbes archive will be distributed in class

4 Kalonymus Kalman Shapira *Kalonymous Kalmin Shapira, Esh Kodesh from David Roskies, ed., The Literature of Destruction: Jewish Responses to Catastrophe (Philadelphia: JPS, 1988) 9/30 10/2 Week 5 The Lodz ghetto, Vilna Ghetto, and other cases (continued) *H. Kruk, The Last Days of the Jerusalem of Lithuania, excerpts *Michal Unger, Religion and Religious Institutions in the Lodz Ghetto, in Remembering for the Future (2001), pp. 335-351. *Trunk, Lodz Ghetto, excerpts MUSIC AND HUMOR IN THE HOLOCAUST *Shirli Gilbert, Music in the Holocaust: Confronting Life in the Nazi Ghettos and Camps *Steve Lipman, Laughter in Hell, excerpts 10/7 10/9 ** special guest lecture by Dan Leshem, Associate Director of Research, Shoah Foundation Week 6 The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising and other cases of Armed Resistance Yisrael Gutman, The Jews of Warsaw, 1939-1943: Ghetto, Underground, Revolt, excerpts *Patt, Armed Jewish Resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto The Case of Sobibor (Escape from Sobibor) *Patt, Jewish Resistance in the Smaller Ghettoes of Eastern Europe, USHMM website *Nechama Tec, Defiance, excerpts and film 10/14 -special film screening for class (Deadly Deception at Sobibor) 7pm, : this program is required for students (unless it conflicts with another class) 10/16 Week 7 Literary Responses during and after the Holocaust David Roskies and Anita Diamant, Holocaust Literature, excerpts **Roskies, Literature of Destruction, excerpts RELIGIOUS RESPONSES IN LITERATURE: DIARIES, STORIES, JOURNALS, YIZKOR BOOKS Zvi Kolitz, Yossel Rakover Speaks to God in Zvi Kolitz, Yosl Rakover Speaks to God: Holocaust Challenges to Religious Faith (Hoboken: Ktav Publishing House, 1995).

5 Chaim Grade, My Quarrel with Hersh Rassyerner 10/21 10/23 Paper 1 due compare Kolitz and Grade Week 8 INTRODUCTION TO RABBINIC RESPONSA, HOLOCAUST AND HALAKHA, AND RABBINIC DERASHOT (SERMONS) *Irving J. Rosenbaum, The Holocaust and Halakha, (Hoboken: Ktav Publishing House, 1976), chapter 1. *Robert Kirschner (ed.), Rabbinic Responsa of the Holocaust Era (New York, 1985) RABBI OSHRY IN THE KOVNO GHETTO *Efroyim Oshry, Responsa from the Holocaust (New York: Judaica Press, 1983), Introduction and selected Responsa. (Hebrew original, Mi-Ma amakim, 4 vols.) OSHRY EXERCISES -Study session on Suicide and Martyrdom (Kiddush Hashem) 10/28 Holocaust educators workshop; special evening lecture 7pm, Wilde auditorium, Martin Dean, USHMM, Encyclopedia of Ghettos 10/30 Week 9 Jewish Life in the Aftermath Patt and Berkowitz, We are Here: New Approaches to Jewish Displaced Persons in the Aftermath of the Holocaust, excerpts Jewish Displaced Persons and the Creation of the State of Israel: Postwar Politics The Holocaust and the politics of genocide Anti-Semitism after the Holocaust The Cases of Jedwabne and Kielce, Poland **Jan Gross, Neighbors and Jan Gross, Fear 11/4 11/6 Week 10 Psychological Responses to the Holocaust the case of David Boder David Boder, Voices of the Holocaust, http://voices.iit.edu/david_boder **Alan Rosen, The Wonder of Their Voices: The 1946 Holocaust Interviews of David Boder, New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.) **Eva Fogelman, The Psychology of Being a Hidden Child Psychological depictions of the Survivor in Literature and Film **Edward Lewis Wallant, The Pawnbroker and IB Singer, Enemies: A Love Story

6 The Second Generation Children of Holocaust Survivors Art Spiegelman, Maus 11/11 11/13 Week 11 Memoirs and Post-Holocaust Literature Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz - excerpts Elie Wiesel, Night, excerpts Roskies and Diamant, excerpts 11/18 11/20 Paper 2 due, compare Levi and Wallant Week 12 THEOLOGY and ETHICS AFTER THE HOLOCAUST Richard Rubenstein, After Auschwitz, pages to be assigned Postwar Theology: Fackenheim, Blumenthal, Levinas, Greenberg, Melissa Raphael and others 11/25 (no class 11/27) 12/2 Week 13 Meaning and Memorialization YIZKOR BOOKS *Jack Kugelmass and Jonathan Boyarin (eds.), From a Ruined Garden: The Memorial Books of Polish Jewry (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 1998). Introduction and selected excerpts. Museums and Memorials **James Young, The Texture of Memory **Edward Linenthal, Preserving Memory: The Struggle to Create America s Holocaust Museum 12/4 Week 14 PRESENTATIONS OF STUDENT RESEARCH 12/9 and 12/11

Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies, Fall 2013, Schedule of Events 1. Award Ceremony, Exhibit Closing and Jewish New Year Celebration - Tuesday, September 3, 7pm KF Room and Museum of Jewish Civilization, Mortensen Library Closing of Chaim Gross Exhibition with A Conversation between Joel Grae and Chaim Gross Welcoming New and Returning Students Reception. 2. TASTE OF THE GREENBERG CENTER Monday, September 9, 9:15-10:30 a.m. Modern Jewish Literature The Fools of Chelm and the Origins of Jewish Literature Instructor: Avinoam Patt Tuesday, September 10, 5-7:20 p.m. Bible and Archaeology What do we know about the Bible from Archaeology? Instructor: Richard Freund Thursday, September 12, 7:30-10:00 p.m. Contemporary Studies in Jewish Civilization Great Powers in the Near East Instructor: Hazza Abo-Rabia 3. Lecture and Exhibit Opening - Monday, September 23, 7 p.m. KF Room and Museum of Jewish Civilization, Mortensen Library Opening of Genocide: Israel Charny and the Scourge of the Twentieth Century 4. Film Screening - Monday, October 14, 7 p.m. Sneak preview of Deadly Deception at Sobibor, in Honor of the 70 th anniversary of the Sobibor Revolt on October 14, 1943. Seating is limited. Please call box office (860) 768-4228 for tickets. 5. Lecture Wednesday, October 16, 7pm Herb Keinon, Jerusalem Post, Why Israel Can t Get a Fair Shake in the Media 6. Workshop - Monday, October 28, 8:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. 1877 Club, Harry Jack Gray Center, University of Hartford Holocaust and Genocide Education Workshop, Learn from the Past: Teach for the Future Registration required by Friday, October 18: 860.768.4964 or mgcjs@hartford.edu 7. Lecture Monday, October 28, 7:00 p.m. "The Nazi Universe of Persecution: Recent Findings of the USHMM Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos" Dr. Martin Dean, Applied Research Scholar and Editor, USHMM Encyclopedia of Ghettos 8. Symposium on Archaeology and the Holocaust - Saturday, November 9, 7 p.m. 70 Years after the Sobibor Revolt: Special Kristallnacht Program Yoram Haimi, Israel Antiquities Authority, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev 9. Lecture - Monday, November 11, 7 p.m. Kristallnacht Program, UConn Greater Hartford Campus Holocaust Denial: A New Form of Anti-Semitism Dr. Deborah Lipstadt Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish History and Holocaust Studies, Emory University 10. Film Lecture and Yiddish Culture program - Monday, December 2 (5 th day of Chanukah) Hebrew High School of New England 300 Bloomfield Avenue West Hartford, CT 06117 7