How have lived realities been understood and expressed through ancient Jewish texts?
Naftali Cohn
- Professor
- Department of Religions and Cultures
- Graduate Program Director:
- MA in Judaic Studies
- MA in Religions and Cultures
- ancient Jewish texts2
- Mishnah
- ritual11
- Jerusalem temple
- feminist theory8
- textual interpretation2
- Roman Empire2
- Judaism5
- narratology2
- rabbinic literature2
- Jewish law2
- cultural history53
- historiography6
- late antiquity5
- history of religions6
- ancient gender construction
- women and religion6
- food studies13
- Jewish studies4
- Jewish ritual in popular culture
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Ira Robinson
Judaism, Hassidic Judaism, Kabbalah
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Norma Joseph
religion and gender, Judaism, food studies
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Lorenzo DiTommaso
apocalypticism, cultural history, history of ideas
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Csaba Nikolenyi
electoral systems, comparative politics, Israel
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Carly Daniel-Hughes
early Christianity, gender and sexuality, human body
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Meir Amor
inclusion/exclusion, human rights, racialization
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Leslie Orr
devadasis, gender and sexuality, pre-colonial South Asia
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Marie-France Dion
Hebrew Bible, methods in biblical studies, text linguistics
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Wilson Jacob
Middle East, cultural history, gender and sexuality
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Geneviève Sicotte
literature studies, food studies, gastronomy
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Rhona Richman Kenneally
food studies, built environment, material culture
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Jose Abraham
Islam, South Asia, Christian-Muslim dialogue
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Jeremy Stolow
religion and media, history of media technologies, social impacts of technology
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Anya Zilberstein
British Empire, early North America, environmental history
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Bradley J. Nelson
Hispanic literature and culture, social impacts of technology, history of science
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Rachel Berger
India, human body, tradition/modernity
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Ronald Rudin
public history, French Canada, oral history
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Jean-Michel Roessli
Christianity, church history, Sibylline Oracles