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         Jewish Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Jewish Gangsters of Modern Literature by Rachel Rubin, 2000-04-05
  2. A Light for Others and Other Jewish Tales from Galicia (Studies in Austrian Literature, Culture, and Thought Translation Series) by Leopold Von Sacher-Masoch, 1994-10
  3. The Jewish Moral Virtues by Eugene B. Borowitz, Frances Weinman Schwartz, 1999-03
  4. Bloodshed and Three Novellas (Library of Modern Jewish Literature) by Cynthia Ozick, 1995-10
  5. Performing Americanness: Race, Class, and Gender in Modern African-American and Jewish-American Literature by Catherine Rottenberg, 2008-04-30
  6. Master of the Return (Library of Modern Jewish Literature) by Tova Reich, 1999-10
  7. Because God Loves Stories: An Anthology of Jewish Storytelling
  8. The Varieties of Jewish Experience. Studies in American Jewish Literature, Number 5. by Daniel [Ed] Walden, 1986
  9. Polish Jewish Literature in the Interwar Years (Judiaic Traditions in Literature, Music, and Art) by Eugenia Prokop-Janiec, 2003-05
  10. The Human Season (Library of Modern Jewish Literature) by Edward Lewis Wallant, 1998-12
  11. The Scroll and the Cross: 1,000 Years of Jewish-Hispanic Literature
  12. Creative Awakening: The Jewish Presence in Twentieth-Century American Literature, 1900-1940s (Contributions in Ethnic Studies) by Louis Harap, 1987-03-18
  13. Unveiling Eve: Reading Gender in Medieval Hebrew Literature (Jewish Culture and Contexts) by Tova Rosen, 2003-03
  14. The Jewish King Lear Comes to America by Jacob Gordin, 2007-06-27

101. Cijoh
Nonprofit organization created to gather information and interview people knowledgeable in the fields of Iranian jewish history, culture, science, literature, social life, politics, art, and economics.
http://www.cijoh.org/
Sinai Temple Celebrates Jewish Iranian Artists A Program of Merging Cultures A Day of Music and Culture Featuring Short Films, Writers, Poets, Visual and Performing Arts
Sunday, May 18
10:30 AM – 4:00 PM at Sinai Temple Refreshments will be served Admission
Temple Members: $10.00 Non-members: $12.00
For Advanced Reservation and Information, call 310/481-3243 or email skreitzman@sinaitemple.org Sponsored by Sinai Temple Adult Education, Sinai Temple Atid, Center for Iranian Jewish Oral History and One Degree of Separation Making history by recording history
About The Book (Clip)
Video Clip (Size 680 KB) About

Send the editor your comments inquiries about the book
Houman Sarshar
houman.sarshar@verizon.net

102. Noncanonical Homepage
The main jewish and Christian apocryphal and pseudepigraphal texts, Priests of the Church and Gnostic literature of Nag Hammadi, Egypt.
http://wesley.nnu.edu/noncanon/

Site Map
Search
Wesley Center Home Aids to Biblical Studies
Noncanonical Literature
Documents to Aid Students and Scholars in Biblical Interpretation
New Addition: Introductions and Summaries of Many Noncanonical Works The Bible is an invaluable collection of sacred ancient texts, written and assembled over several hundreds of years by numerous authors. These texts were written to particular people living at a definite time and place who shared common experiences and knowledge.
By studying similar literature that precedes and follows the biblical writings chronologically, students of the Bible are better prepared to discover the intended meaning. Apocryphal and pseudepigraphal literature was apparently intended either to supplement or supplant existing canonical literature. Many of the apocryphal gospels offer guesses as to what occurred during the so-called "missing years" of Jesus' life during his childhood or after his resurrection. Others attempt to provide support for later theological convictions both orthodox and heretical. Whether the information found in the apocryphal literature is factually correct or not is not necessarily important. These documents give interpreters valuable insight into what some Jews and Christians believed in various places at different times. Old Testament Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha Old Testament Apocrypha Old Testament Pseudepigrapha New Testament Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha

103. Cornell University Program Of Jewish Studies
The program has grown out of the conviction that Judaic civilization merits its own comprehensive and thorough treatment and that proper understanding of any culture is inconceivable without adequate knowledge of the language, literature, and history of the people that created it.
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/jwst/index.html
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Program of Jewish Studies
Faculty Information
Fall 2003 Course Descriptions
Spring 2004 Course Descriptions
CUInfo 2002-2003 Course Descriptions
For links , events, and more information see
Department of Near Eastern Studies

About This Site

104. At The Cutting Edge Of Jewish Studies; The Most Recent Developments In The Field
writing. Hebrew literature in the PostImperial Age The Future of jewish Identity at the Millennium By David Aberbach, Dept. of
http://www.artsweb.mcgill.ca/programs/jewish/30yrs/literature.html

Cover

Preface

Biblical Studies

Early Judaism
...
North American Studies

Modern Jewish Literature
Israel Studies

McGill Jewish Studies
Home

Faculty
Undergraduates Graduates ... Resources Contact Us Dept. of Jewish Studies 3438 rue McTavish Montreal, Quebec Tel: (514) 398-6543 Fax: (514) 398-5158 Email: ( jewish Reading Jewish Women's Writings By Esther Frank , Dept. of Jewish Studies, McGill University The proliferation of writings by Jewish women in America, the expansion of scholarship herald a new moment in the study of Jewish writing. Hebrew Literature in the Post-Imperial Age: The Future of Jewish Identity at the Millennium By David Aberbach , Dept. of Jewish Studies, McGill University My talk has two parts: first, things that are new in Hebrew literature in comparison with the recent past; second, the cutting edge of Hebrew literature in a global perspective - the biblical prophets. North American Jewish Studies By Deborah Dash Moore , Vassar College Although pessimism does not come naturally to me, I have sustained high levels of frustration for close to two decades as Jewish studies has grown and flourished in the United States. My frustration stems from the pace and direction of that growth, specifically the almost total lack of opportunities despite strong student interest to teach the history of Jews in the U.S. (or what we provincially call American Jewish history, resolutely ignoring both Canada and the rest of the Americas). Contact Jewish Studies I About this Page I

105. Ode To The Circumcised Male
by Edgar J. Schoen, MD (jewish physician and circumcision advocate)
http://www.cirp.org/literature/schoen-ode
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DISEASES IN CHILDREN, Volume 141: Page 128,
February 1987.
Sir. Before the mid-1970s, the American standard of care included neonatal circumcision, a minor surgical procedure that promoted genital hygiene and prevented later penile cancer as well as cervical cancer in female sexual partners. More recently, evidence has suggested that adequate hygiene is all that is needed and that circumcision is an unnecessary and traumatic procedure. In 1983, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology jointly agreed that routine circumcision is not necessary, and third-party payers are increasingly refusing to pay for the procedure. Whether recent evidence of a decreased incidence of urinary tract infections in circumcised male infants can stem the anticircumcision tide is questionable. The purpose of this communication is to offer some solace to the generations of circumcised males who are now being told they have undergone an unnecessary and deforming procedure, which may also have been brutal and psychologically traumatic. To them I offer these lines: Ode to the Circumcised Male We have a new topic to heat up our passions
the foreskin is currently top of the fashions.

106. Jewish Group Complains Over Sale Of Hate Books Online -- August 10, 1999
CNN
http://www.cnn.com/books/news/9908/10/hate.literature/index.html
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Jewish group complains over sale of hate books online
Web posted on: Tuesday, August 10, 1999 4:09:41 PM (CNN) The Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center says it has asked the German Justice Ministry to investigate whether Barnesandnoble.com and Amazon.com, America's two largest Internet booksellers, have illegally shipped hate literature to Germany, including "The Turner Diaries" and Adolf Hitler's " Mein Kampf The center has written to the booksellers saying they hope and expect the firms will move quickly to ensure they do not inadvertently emerge as a major "purveyor of hate" in Germany. Those letters went to the German-based Bertelsmann company, which owns 50 percent of Barnesandnoble.com, and to Amazon.com. The Simon Wiesenthal Center is a Los Angeles-based international organization for Holocaust remembrance, the defense of human rights and the Jewish people.

107. Jewish Studies Program At The University Of Maryland
An interdisciplinary undergraduate program in jewish studies encouraging research, offering courses on culture, language, history, philosophy and literature.
http://www.inform.umd.edu/EdRes/Colleges/ARHU/Depts/jwst/program.html
JEWISH STUDIES PROGRAM College of Arts and Humanities 0113 Woods Hall
College Park, Maryland 20742
Director: Marsha Rozenblit
Professors: Evelyn Beck, Adele Berlin, Marsha Rozenblit
Associate Professors: Bernard Cooperman, Hayim Lapin, Charles Manekin
Assistant Professors: Robert Fradkin
Instructors: Ruth Liberman, Nili Levy
Lecturer: Sheila Jelen Description Jewish Studies is interdisciplinary program which encourages research and provides instruction about the rich history and culture of the Jewish people from earliest times to the present day. Dedicated to the highest standards of scholarship, the program offers a wide array of courses in Hebrew, Jewish History, Bible, Rabbinics, Jewish Philosophy, Yiddish, and Jewish literature. These courses, offered by a faculty renowned for its scholarly and teaching excellence, form one of the largest undergraduate Jewish Studies programs in North America. In addition, the Jewish Studies program supports faculty research projects and organizes frequent academic conferences and lectures in order to bring the fruits of scholarship to a wider public. History of the Jewish Studies Department The University of Maryland has offered Hebrew language instruction since the late 1940s, but a formal Jewish Studies program began in 1974 when philanthropist Joseph Meyerhoff and the Associated Jewish Charities of Baltimore endowed the Louis L. Kaplan Chair in Jewish History. Responding to increased student interest, the University created several positions in Jewish studies. In 1980, a challenge grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and a gift from Harvey Meyerhoff created the Harvey Meyerhoff Chair in Jewish History as well as the Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Studies. The following year, Robert H. Smith endowed a third chair in Jewish Studies.

108. From The Field
The littleknown field of jewish Latin American literature, an essay by Stephen Sadow.
http://www.numag.neu.edu/0001/ftf.html
Jan. 2000 FEATURES THE CAMPUS THE ECONOMY HEALTH CARE CITIES ... POLITICS DEPARTMENTS LETTERS TALK OF THE GOWN E LINE FROM THE FIELD ... HUSKIANA SEARCH
N.U MAGAZINE
Click here to search other
servers at Northeastern. At Home Abroad The Little-known Field of Jewish Latin American Literature.
By Stephen Sadow
A subset of the field of Jewish studies, Latin American Jewish studies investigates the history, sociology, demographics, and cultural aspects of Jewish communities and individuals from Latin America and the Caribbean. What do you do when you are working with a literature that is obscure outside of its home culture? What do you do when members of one culture know little of another culture, and vice versa? Responding to these questions, I decided upon an approach that would take me far beyond traditional literary criticism. Through a series of "voyages of discovery" to Jewish communities in Latin America, a growing number of correspondences with writers, literary critics, psychologists, even mystics, and an enormous amount of reading, I immersed myself in the Jewish literature and culture of Latin America. These writers wrote of the strains of being in the minority, of balancing Jewish and Hispanic culture, of Jewish tradition, of optimism for the future, of Zionism, and of the Holocaust. It became my intention to enter this literary culture as a step towards truly understanding its writings. I wanted to see the world as a Jewish Latin American writer saw it. More importantly, it was my goal to become a transmitter of culture from Spanish to English and from English to Spanish.

109. Manna Outdoor: Food For The Jewish Outdoor Soul
The jewish outdoor site including news, discussion board, literature and classifieds.
http://mannaoutdoor.com
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110. JEWS4U.com/A Leading Jewish Internet Site
A jewish site with history, photographs and links to shopping, literature, sports, and Israel.
http://jews4u.com/
Shalom and Welcome to Jews4u.com. This site provides extensive information on Jewish Culture, Education, History, Holidays, Religious aspects, as well as Israel matters. I hope viewers can utilize this information to bring Jewish Communities around the world a bit closer. Am Yisrael Chai !!! Enjoy!
JEWISH SITES
ORGANIZATIONS EDUCATION RELIGIOUS ISRAEL HISTORY
LINKS
AIPAC

Haaretz

Hadassah

Hillel
...
USY

News
Maven
Jerusalem Post US-Israel News Virtual Jerusalem Schools Brandeis Cantorial School Hebrew University Rabbinacle School ... Yeshiva University Museums FL Jewish Museum NY Jewish Museum Museum of Tolerance US-Holocaust Museum ... Ask a Rabbi Travel Books/Resources Eilat Israel Free Tours ... Tel Aviv Museums Bible Museum Diaspora Museum Israel Museum Yad Vashem Government Knesset Ministry of Defense Ministry of Finance Ministry of Justice ... Religious Affairs Quick Facts American Jews Famous Jews Jewish Quotes Jewish Holidays ... Current World Jewry Jewish History Biblical Times 1st Temple Destruction Maccabbee Revolution 2nd Temple Destruction ... Travel US Cities Chicago Los Angeles Miami New York ... San Francisco European Cities Amsterdam Berlin Brussels London ... Warsaw Other Cities Buenas Areas Caracus Hong Kong Mexico City ... Toronto JEWS4U.com is in no way liable for the content of these sites

111. The Bulletin Archive 19>
Biography of the immigrant author and his importance to jewishAmerican literature.
http://www.emanuelnyc.org/bulletin/archive/20.html
Abraham Cahan
In the history of our people's sojourn in America, many Jewish authors have been recognized by their Gentile counterparts as literary equals. Indeed, by the middle decades of the twentieth century, American-Jewish intellectuals with the names of Alfred Kazin, Leslie Fiedler, Henry Roth, Delmore Schwartz, Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, and others had clearly become primi inter pares ("first among equals"). Today, so accepted is the Jew in the society of American letters, the singling out of an "American-Jewish" author seems unnecessary, out-date, even obsolete. And yet, there was a definite beginning to this process of acculturation, which included the translation of a Yiddish heritage to the kultur of America. That translation may be traced, both literally and symbolically, to the person of Abraham Cahan (1860-1951). Cahan, a typical Eastern European immigrant fleeing the Russian pogroms of 1881, was to the newly arrived Jew in America what Shmuel Agnon was to the masses who settled in Palestine/Israel. A journalist, an editor, an author, a socialist leader, Cahan quickly assumed the literary leadership of a Jewish community brimming with intellectual fervor and social discontent. His first book, Yekl, A Tale of the New York Ghetto (1896), was praised by William Dean Howells as the harbinger of a "new New York." Having achieved distinction among the literati, Cahan would continue his furious and pointed penmanship. This culminated in two directions: as editor of the Yiddish paper, the Forward, and as author of a number of novels.

112. Jews In The Civil War
jewishAmerican History on the Web is an online archive of original documents, journals, books and literature on the subject of Jews in the Civil War.
http://www.jewish-history.com/civilwar.htm
Jews in the Civil War
Col. Marcus M. Spiegel
120 Ohio Volunteer Inf.
G-d Bless The USA!
Table of Contents: Jews in the Civil War
Prayer for the Jewish Soldiers in World War II Links to pages that are not on Jewish-History.com will open in a separate window. Search for : All of Jewish-history.com The Occident Wild West Palestine UNION CONFEDERATE Union Soldiers Passover Seder Confederate Soldiers Passover Seder Col. Marcus M. Spiegel of the 120th Ohio Volunteers Judah P. Benjamin, "Brains of the Confederacy" ... Col. Max Einstein of the 27th Pennsylvania Infantry , by Shalom E. Lamm Rabbi Henry S. Jacobs of Columbia, South Carolina Portrait of Abraham Lincoln , by Solomon N. Carvalho Rosanna Osterman, Heroine of Galveston Frederick Knefler, Hungarian Patriot and Union General , by Stephen Beszedits Eugenia Phillips and Gen. Butler: "Beauty and the Beast" "The American Jew as Patriot, Soldier and Citizen" by Simon Wolf Rabbi Bernard Illowy, Sage of New Orleans A Black Jewish Officer of the U.S. Colored Troops Secession Sermon of Rabbi Illowy "Sketches From the Seat of War" by "A Jewish Soldier" ... April 27, 1865 , by Emma Lazarus (age 16) Isaac J. Levy, 49th Virginia Infantry

113. MyJewishLearning.com - Culture: Literature
Extensive articles on jewish American, Hebrew, and Yiddish and Ladino literature.
http://www.myjewishlearning.com/culture/literature.htm
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Literature
Jewish American Literature, Today and Yesterday Cynthia Ozick. Credit: Julius Ozick Philip Roth. Credit: Nancy Crampton Modern Hebrew Literature How do you say "locomotive" in biblical Hebrew? A dilemma for pioneer writers of modern Hebrew literature Israeli Literature Poetry was the predominant genre in pre-1948 Palestine, but prose fiction eventually came to dominate Israeli literature. Quiz Test your knowledge of Jewish Literature. Bibliography
Recommended books Author Profiles print email save ... find similar

114. Elie Wiesel Center For Judaic Studies - Boston University
Offers a broadbased curriculum in jewish history, literature, and thought, in addition to Hebrew language study.
http://www.bu.edu/religion/judaic/judst.html

115. Jewish-American Literature
Overview of 19th and 20th century jewish writing in Yiddish and English, and criticism of recent Holocaust literature.
http://www.jbuff.com/c021501.htm
Jewish-American Literature
Commentary by Dr. Gerhard Falk
Jewish-American Literature
Jewish-American literature is now only about one century old if we include that literature which was written in Yiddish by immigrants between 1885 and 1935. Yiddish, however, is hardly used in America at the beginning of the 21st century so that anything foreign except some of the works of Goethe and Voltaire has no influence on the American Jew simply because he cannot read it. Yiddish writers were commonly radicals and secularists. From the time of the first volume of Yiddish poetry published in America in 1877 to the end of the Yiddish era in about 1975, Jewish-American writers always exhibited a strong interest in radical and hence secular ideas. Yiddish writers expressed themselves in poetry, in the theater, in novels, in newspapers and in intellectual books, papers and pamphlets. Throughout these five media ran, for the most part, a secular attitude most visible in the novel. The first Jewish novels written in America were written by immigrants. This was true not because there were no Jews here before the last two decades of the nineteenth century, but because those Jews who had come here before 1881 were very few, had arrived in the 17th century from Spain and Portugal and in the nineteenth century from Germany and had rapidly assimilated into the majority American culture. However, 1881 marked a major turning point in Jewish history. On March 1 of that year the Russian Czar, Alexander II, was assassinated. When

116. The Skirball Department Of Hebrew And Judaic Studies At NYU
Encompasses Hebrew language and literature as well as medieval and modern jewish history and culture.
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/hebrew/
Click on Artwork Below To Enter Site "My Song Overflows"
Diane Leon
2001, collage
For more of Ms. Leon's work, please visit Manhattan Arts.

117. Books And Websites About The Holocaust For Young Adults
Eleven works of jewish Holocaust literature, annotated and presented for younger readers.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/jubo/holocaust.html
DO YOU KNOW? WILL YOU REMEMBER? Books and Websites about the Holocaust for Young Adults
Polish children imprisoned in Auschwitz look out from behind the barbed wire fence.
Approximately 40,000 Polish children were imprisoned in the camp before being transferred to Germany during the "Heuaktion" (Hay Action). The blond boy at the lower right may be Kalman Cylberszac (b.1934), the son of Rachel and Nachum Cylberszac from Lask, Poland.
Credit: Main Commission for the Investigation of Nazi War Crimes, courtesy of USHMM Photo Archives
In the United States, many school systems have a "snow day" closing schools on Yom Kippur, a Jewish High Holy day so families can attend services together. April has been declared "National Holocaust Month" and students study this time in history during that month so as "Never to Forget." Steven Spielberg made an Oscar winning film based upon Thomas Keneally's book, Schindler's List . And what does this mean to us? It means that our everyday lives exist with a certain kind of ease that I am sure none of the Holocaust victims would deny us; it is as this kind of life they had prior to World War II.
But, what they would want is for us to remember the nightmare of the Holocaust, because it can happen again. And each one of us, by knowing and remembering, will be ready so that the next time maniacal prejudicial attacks against Jews or any other people begins, such slaughter cannot happen again. There are many ways and many reasons to study and learn about the Holocaust. Everybody takes something different from the experience. The below listed websites and book summaries are just a few that I hope will not only help you to remember the Holocaust, but give you courage to speak out and stand up if another situation occurs. And it is occurring...

118. Melton Center For Jewish Studies - Ohio State University
Offers courses for all levels in Hebrew language, literature, cognate Semitic languages, Yiddish, jewish history, Rabbinics, and jewish philosophy.
http://melton-center.ohio-state.edu/

Faculty
Undergraduate Program and Courses Graduate Program Funding and Scholarships ... About the Center News and Events Mann Symposium: Unusual Tales of Jewish Books
January 23 2003-2004 Newsletter Of Special Note 2003-4 H.S. Honors Program Jewish Music CD released: Between East and West Graduate Fellowships Contact the Center

119. Stanford University Taube Center For Jewish Studies
Offers courses and symposia on jewish history, literature, language, religion and politics. Students may create individually designed majors in jewish studies.
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/jewishstudies/
Jewish Studies at Stanford The Taube Center for Jewish Studies at Stanford oversees numerous academic activities pertaining to the study of the Jewish experience. Ten faculty Members, including three with endowed professorships, teach courses on the full expanse of Jewish history, literature, language, religion and politics. Hundreds of undergraduates take advantage of these courses each year They also have the opportunity to minor in or create their own individually designed major in Jewish Studies. Many graduate students enroll in full-time doctoral studies. The Taube Center for Jewish Studies also offers four annual endowed lectures and many other opportunities for faculty, students and the public to participate in a wide range of symposia, colloquia, conferences, and other special events. Address: Taube Center for Jewish Studies
Stanford University
Building 240, Room 103
Stanford, CA 94305 Mail Code: E-mail: jewish.studies@stanford.edu Phone: Fax: Center Directors Aron Rodrigue
Eva Chernov Lokey Professor in Jewish Studies
Professor of History
Building 200, Room 238

120. Center For Judaic Studies
Offers an interdisciplinary program exploring the evolution of jewish civilization and its expression in history, literature, philosophy and religion.
http://www.du.edu/cjs/

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