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AMST 080
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Mamas and Matriarchs: A Social History of Jewish Women in America
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T Th 2:00-3:15
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MU 204
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Ferris
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JWST 61/ GERM 61/ RELI 85
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Jews in German Culture
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M W 9:00-9:50with recitation sections, at various times
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PEABODY
104
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Hess
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HEBR 002, Section 001
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Elementary Modern Hebrew
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T Th 3:30-4:45
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DE 203
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Friedman
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HEBR 002, Section 002
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Elementary Modern Hebrew
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T Th 12:30-1:45
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DE 205
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Friedman
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HEBR 004, Section 001
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Intermediate Modern Hebrew
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T Th
2:00-3:15
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DE 205
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Friedman
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RELI 114
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Elementary Biblical Hebrew
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T Th 2:00-3:15
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MU 105
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Reynolds
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JWST 154/ RELI 154
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Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Judaism
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T Th 3:30-4:45
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MU 202
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Ariel
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Courses
offered in Fall 2004
Courses offered in Spring 2004
Courses offered in Fall 2003
ALL Jewish Studies Courses at UNC
HEBR 1-4. Beginning
and intermediate instruction in Modern Hebrew. The course
topic will vary with the instructor. The class will be limited to seminar
size, and students must receive permission from the instructor to register.
JWST 21/RELI 21 Introduction to
Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Literature.
JWST 24/RELI 24 Introduction to Ancient Judaism.
This course surveys Jewish history and religion during the Second Temple and
Rabbinic periods, from the destruction
of the First Jewish Temple (Solomon's Temple) in 586 B.C.E.
to the Muslim conquest
of Palestine (640 C.E.). Magness.
JWST 28/RELI 28/CLAR 28 Archaeology of Palestine in the New Testament Period.
This course surveys the archaeology of Palestine
(Modern Israel and Jordan) from the Persian period (CA. 586 B.C.) to the
Muslim conquest (640 A.D.). Magness. GC Non-Western/Comparative perspective.
JWST 34/RELI 34 Introduction to Modern Judaism.
The course offers a comprehensive understanding of the development of Judaism
from the late middle ages to contemporary times. A&S Western Historical
perspective. Ariel.
JWST 44/RELI 44 Introduction to American Judaism. Course
provides a comprehensive introduction to American Judaism, its various
movements, institutions, theological and liturgical characteristics, as well
as its standing within the larger framework of religious life in America.
Ariel.
JWST 49/ ENGL 49 Studies in Literary
Topics: Jewish American Literature. An intensive study of
Jewish American Literature. Junior, senior elective. For English majors,
satisfies group F requirement, or with group letter designation, can fill
requirement for groups B-E.
JWST 50/PWAD 52/HIST 50 History
of the Holocaust: The
Destruction of the European Jews (PWAD 52). Antisemitism; the
Jews of Europe; the Hitler Dictatorship; Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy from
Persecution to the final Solution; Jewish Response; Collaborators,
Bystanders, and Rescuers; Aftermath. Browning. A&S Western Historical
perspective.
JWST 53/ WMST 53/ AMST 53 Jewish Women in America: A Social History. This
course examines the history and culture of Jewish women in America from their arrival in New Amsterdam in 1654 to the present day, exploring how
gender shaped their experiences of immigration, assimilation, religious
observance, home, work, motherhood, family, and feminism.
JWST 55/RELI 55 The Legends of Genesis.
A study of the Patriarchal narratives preserved in the book of Genesis as it
is illuminated by recent discoveries in the cultures of the ancient Near
East. Lange.
JWST 57/RELI 57 Prophecy and
Divination in Israel and Judah.
An examination of the origins, psychology, and conventional forms of prophecy
as well as the writings of major prophets of the Old Testament. Van Seters.
JWST 61/GERM 61/RELI 85 German Culture and the Jewish
Question. A study of the role of Jews and the Jewish
Question in German culture from 1750 to the Holocaust and beyond. Discussions
and texts (literary, political, theological) in English. B.A.-level Western
Historical perspective.
JWST 78/RELI 78 Judaism In Our
Time. An examination of Judaism in its two major centers,
demonstrating how different social and cultural environments shape very
different interpretations and practices of the Jewish tradition.
JWST 79/RELI 79 Religion In Modern Israel.
Examines the major religious groups that operate in the state of Israel and influence its social and cultural
development; analyzes the relationship among religion, state, and society in Israel.
Ariel.
JWST 86/ AMST 86 Shalom Y’all: The Jewish Experience
in the American South. This
course traces the history of Jewish southerners from the colonial era to the
present, exploring the “braided identity” of Jews in the South
– their relationships with white and black Gentile southerners, their
loyalty to the South as a region, and their embrace of southern culture
through foodways and religious observance.
JWST 92/RELI 92 From Many to
One: A History of Monotheism in Israel
and Judah.
In this class students will learn how the idea of monotheism developed in
ancient Israel,
with special recognition to its environment. Lange. A&S Western Historical
perspective.
JWST 111/RELI 111/CLAR 110 Ancient
Synagogues. Prerequisite,
Religious Studies 28 or consent of instructor. This is a course on ancient
synagogues in Palestine and the Diaspora from
the Second Temple period to the seventh century
A.D. Magness.
JWST 112/PLSH 112
Twentieth-Century Polish Literature and Culture. A survey
of the major works of twentieth-century Polish literature and culture in
English translation. Some readings in Polish for students who can use the
language. Holmgren, Levine. A&S Aesthetic/Literature perspective.
RELI 113 Biblical Hebrew.
Introduction to the grammar and exegesis of Biblical Hebrew.
RELI 114 Biblical Hebrew.
Prerequisite, RELI 113 or permission of instructor. Continuation of
Religion 113.
JWST 122/RELI 122 Exploring the Dead Sea Scrolls. comprehensive
introduction to the Dead Sea Scrolls and the different Jewish groups
connected with them. Lange. A&S Pre-1700 Western History perspective.
JWST 126/RELI 126 What are Holy
Scriptures: The Canonical History of the Hebrew Bible.
The course traces the canonical process, which led to the Hebrew Bible and
the Greek Old Testament. Lange. A&S Pre-1700 Western History perspective.
JWST 154/RELI 154 Gender and
Sexuality in Contemporary Judaism. The seminar examines the
developments in gender roles and in sexuality in contemporary Judaism. Ariel.
JWST 164/SLAV 164 Jews in Polish
and Russian Literature. Explores the fictional
representation of Jewish life in Russia
and Poland
by Russian, Polish, and Jewish authors from the nineteenth century to the
present. Holmgren, Levine. A&S Aesthetic/Literature perspective and
Cultural Diversity requirement.
JWST 165/SLAV 165/PWAD 165
Literature of Atrocity: The Gulag and the Holocaust in Russian and
East European Literature (PWAD 165). Literary
representation in fiction, poetry, memoirs, and other genres of the mass
annihilation and terror in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union under the Nazi and Communist regimes. Spring. Levine.
B.A.-level Aesthetic perspective and Cultural Diversity requirement.
JWST 169/SLAV 169 Coming to America: The
Slavic Immigrant Experience in Literature. Fictional and
autobiographical expressions of the Slavic and East European immigrant
experience in the twentieth century. Readings
include Russian, Polish, Jewish, and Czech authors from early 1900s to
present. Spring. Holmgren, Levine. B.A.-level Aesthetic perspective and
Cultural Diversity requirement.
GERM 006-I First-Year Seminar:
Germans, Jews and the History of Antisemitism.
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