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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20251023T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20251023T190000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020155
CREATED:20250714T181331Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250714T181331Z
UID:10005867-1761240600-1761246000@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:U-M Frankel Center Event: On Jewish Print Media with Author Vivi Lachs
DESCRIPTION:The 2025-26 Frankel Institute “Jews & Media” Theme year is pleased to welcome Vivi Lachs\, author of East End Jews: Sketches from the London Yiddish Press\, to Ann Arbor for a special presentation on Jewish print media in collaboration with Frankel Institute Fellows. \n  \nStay tuned for more details!
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/u-m-frankel-center-event-on-jewish-print-media-with-author-vivi-lachs/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/9780814351345.avif
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20251021T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20251021T190000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020155
CREATED:20250716T161446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T200333Z
UID:10005870-1761066000-1761073200@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:U-M Frankel Center Event:  The Great Yiddish Parade: Culture\, Activism\, and Song
DESCRIPTION:Join Vivi Lachs\, author of East End Jews: Sketches from the London Yiddish Press\, and the Frankel Center’s Yiddish Lecturer\, Elena Luchina\, for a Yiddish Workshop geared towards students. \nMore details to come.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/u-m-frankel-center-event-undergraduate-yiddish-workshop/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/9780814351345-1.avif
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250916T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250916T190000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020155
CREATED:20250714T180659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250725T132207Z
UID:10005866-1758042000-1758049200@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:U-M Frankel Center Event: Jewish Music in 4 Objects with Assaf Shelleg
DESCRIPTION:The first event of the 2025-26 Frankel Institute “Jews & Media” theme year will be a workshop on Jewish Music & Sound. The intimate event will feature special presentations by visiting scholar Assaf Shelleg and Frankel Fellows Jeremiah Lockwood\, Uri Schreter\, and Tamar Sella. \n  \nStay tuned for more details.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/u-m-frankel-center-event-jewish-music-sound-workshop-with-assaf-shelleg/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250325T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250325T180000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020155
CREATED:20250116T205029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250228T203700Z
UID:10005645-1742920200-1742925600@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:U-M Frankel Center Event - Hila Amit Guest Lecture
DESCRIPTION:Queer Belongings and the Jewish “Homeland”: Israeli and Jewish American Lives Between Home and Away\n\nDr. Hila Amit (Thomas Mann House Fellow) in conversation about intersections of queerness\, migration\, and identity in the context of Israel/Palestine and the Jewish diaspora.\n\n\n\n\nThrough a blend of fiction and academic inquiry\, Amit examines the ways queer Jewish lives challenge and reimagine narratives of homeland\, belonging\, and migration. \nIn her academic book “A Queer Way Out: The Politics of Queer Emigration from Israel (SUNY\, 2018)\, Amit explores the story of queer Israeli emigrants. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in Berlin\, London\, and New York\, she examined motivations for departure and feelings of unbelonging to the Israeli national collective. Amit showed that sexual orientation and left-wing political affiliation play significant roles in decisions to leave. Amit investigated how queer Israeli emigrants question national and heterosexual norms such as army service\, monogamy\, and reproduction\, in their decision to leave Israel. In her new research project\, Amit is conducting interviews with queer Jewish Americans grappling with notions of Homeland and Belonging\, particularly in the wake of the October 7th events and their profound global reverberations. \nMeanwhile\, her two fiction books center on queer experiences in Israel/Palestine\, offering intimate\, layered portrayals of life at the margin of society. Her new fiction work deals with a possible loss of the Hebrew language and a possible obsolescence of the state of Israel. \nThe conversation with Amit will delve into how these themes converge in Amit’s creative and scholarly practices. It will explore the tensions between rootedness and mobility\, the impact of historical trauma on personal and collective identity\, and the possibilities for imagining alternative futures through queer lenses. Amit will also reflect on the role of storytelling—fictional and academic—as a tool for navigating the complexities of identity\, belonging\, and resistance in times of upheaval.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/frankel-center-guest-lecture-hila-amit/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Educational,UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/AMIT.Headshot.Small_-e1737060544687.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250130T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250130T143000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020156
CREATED:20250116T202027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250116T202400Z
UID:10005642-1738242000-1738247400@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:Frankel Center Guest Lecture: Tamar Menashe
DESCRIPTION:Bridging Legal Worlds: Jewish Women as Litigants before a German Imperial Supreme Court\nGuest Speaker: Tamar Menashe (Emory University)\nIn 1495\, Germany’s Imperial Chamber Court (Reichskammergericht) was founded as the institution that oversaw the adoption of Roman law as Germany’s imperial civil law. In 1511\, a Jewish woman named Elena\, who sued her husband and his lover for violating Jewish law (halakha)\, became the first Jewish litigant before this new tribunal\, opening the doors of the highest level of the imperial legal system to many Jews who would follow suit. Focusing on the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries\, this lecture will explore the experiences of Jewish women who traversed legal and religious boundaries to litigate before this supreme imperial court and other competing imperial courts. This talk will consider previously untapped court cases from this period as invaluable sources for illuminating the lives of these women\, the ways in which they navigated Jewish\, imperial\, and local laws\, and how their litigation helped fashion Jews’ legal standing in the eyes of imperial jurists. \nTamar Menashe is the Jay and Leslie Cohen assistant professor in Emory University’s history department and the Tam institute for Jewish Studies. Menashe’s work focuses on the intersections of the law with gender\, culture\, and Christian-Jewish relations\, primarily in the German Lands in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. She holds a BA from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem\, and MA\, Mphil and PhD from Columbia University (2022). Her dissertation “The Imperial Supreme Court and Jews in Cross-Confessional Legal Cultures in Germany\, 1495–1690” won the 2022 Fritz Stern Dissertation Prize for the best doctoral dissertation on a topic in German history written at a North American university. She is currently revising her dissertation for a publication as a book titled People of the Law: Jewish Litigation and Minority Belonging in Early Modern Germany. Prior to joining the Emory faculty in 2023\, Menashe was a Fellow at the Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. She was the 2023 Preyer scholar of the American Society for Legal history and the 2023-2024 Gerald Westheimer Early Career Fellow at the Leo Baeck Institute New York-Berlin.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/frankel-center-guest-lecture-tamar-menashe/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Educational,UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Tamar-Menashe_PXL_20211213_202205009.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20221103T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20221103T150000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020156
CREATED:20220826T161143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220826T161143Z
UID:10004205-1667482200-1667487600@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:UM Frankel Center Lecture - Josh Lambert
DESCRIPTION:“Can a Literary Mafia Affect Your Choice of Books?”: Jews\, Publishing\, and American Literature\nJosh Lambert\, Wellesley College\n  \n \nIn the 1960s and 1970s\, many American authors\, Jewish and non-Jewish alike\, complained about a “Jewish literary mafia.” While perniciously circulating antisemitic ideas\, such claims also reflected the remarkable success of Jews in the U.S. publishing industry. How did Jews’ roles in publishing influence the development of American literature? How can attention to this story help to produce a more equitable industry now? \nThis is a hybrid event. Register for the virtual stream here: https://myumi.ch/kyJmr \nJosh Lambert is the Sophia Moses Robison Associate Professor of Jewish Studies and English\, and director of the Jewish Studies Program\, at Wellesley College. He did his undergraduate work at Harvard and his doctorate at the University of Michigan\, and before Wellesley he taught at NYU\, UMass Amherst\, and Princeton\, and served as the Academic Director of the Yiddish Book Center. His books include Unclean Lips: Obscenity\, Jews\, and American Culture (2014) and\, co-edited with Ilan Stavans\, How Yiddish Changed America and How America Changed Yiddish (2020).
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/um-frankel-center-lecture-josh-lambert/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20220922T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20220922T133000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020156
CREATED:20220826T154059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220826T154059Z
UID:10004203-1663848000-1663853400@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:UM Frankel Center Event – Todd Endelman
DESCRIPTION:A Jewish Race Scientist in Twentieth-Century Britain\nTodd M. Endelman\, Professor Emeritus of History and Judaic Studies\, University of Michigan\n \nThis lecture will explore how Redcliffe Salaman\, an eminent Jewish scientist in early twentieth-century Britain\, embraced a racial understanding of Jewish peoplehood and how he developed a biological history of the Jews. It will emphasize the ubiquity of racial notions of physical and intellectual inheritance in scientific circles in Britain before World War II. Above all\, it will stress how racial categories allowed secular Jewish intellectuals in Britain (and elsewhere) to develop ways of thinking about the bonds of Jewishness that transcended older notions that saw Jewish difference solely in religious terms. It will also tease out the connections between Salaman’s views of Jewishness and his pathbreaking work breeding blight-free potatoes. \nThis is a hybrid lecture in Room 2022 South Thayer Building. Zoom registration: https://myumi.ch/RWNV4 \nTodd M. Endelman is Professor Emeritus of History and Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. A native of California\, he was educated at the University of California\, Berkeley\, and Harvard University\, where he received his Ph.D. in 1976. He is a specialist in the history of the Jews in Britain and in the social history of modern European Jewry. He taught at Yeshiva University\, Indiana University\, and the University of Michigan. While at Michigan\, he was director of the Jean and Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic Studies for eleven years. He retired from teaching in 2012 and now divides his time between Ann Arbor\, Michigan\, and Brooklyn\, New York. His books include The Jews of Georgian England\, 1714-1830 (1979); Radical Assimilation in Anglo-Jewish History\, 1656-1945 (1990); The Jews of Britain\, 1656-2000 (2002); Broadening Jewish History (2014); and Leaving the Jewish Fold: Conversion and Radical Assimilation in Modern Jewish History (2015). He recently completed a biography of the Anglo-Jewish race scientist\, country gentleman\, and historian of the potato Redcliffe Salaman.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/um-frankel-center-event-todd-endelman/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20220322T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20220322T180000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020156
CREATED:20220124T203326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220124T203326Z
UID:10003995-1647964800-1647972000@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:The Society of Savage Jews: The Politics of Jewish Primitivism
DESCRIPTION:Samuel J. Spinner\n \n\n\n\n\nThe unlikely poetic relationship between the German poet Else Lasker-Schüler and the Yiddish and Hebrew poet Uri Zvi Grinberg spans the political range of Jewish primitivism from the bohemian left to the radical right. Aesthetic primitivism catalyzed Lasker-Schüler’s poetry and visual art and is most strikingly evident in the “Society of Savage Jews\,” a utopian community of writers and artists that existed only in her writings and artwork; Grinberg borrowed this trope and used it for very different ends—his savage Jews were Zionist pioneers\, creating a nation-state. This lecture will explore the aesthetic and political flexibility of Jewish primitivism\, showing how it could marshal the same aesthetics in pursuit of opposing politics. \nHybrid Event\nSouth Thayer Building Room 2022\nRegister for the Zoom webinar at: https://myumi.ch/844Z6 \nSamuel Spinner is the Zelda and Myer Tandetnik Assistant Professor of Yiddish Language\, Literature\, and Culture at Johns Hopkins University. His book Jewish Primitivism\, on primitivism in modern Jewish literature\, photography\, and graphic art\, was published in July 2021 by Stanford University Press. He is currently researching a book on the aesthetics of monumentality in Holocaust museums and literature. His work has appeared in PMLA\, MLN\, Prooftexts\, and German Quarterly. Spinner is a co-editor of “German Jewish Cultures\,” a book series published by Indiana University Press and serves as an editor of the Yiddish Studies journal In Geveb.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/the-society-of-savage-jews-the-politics-of-jewish-primitivism/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20220224T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20220224T140000
DTSTAMP:20260608T020156
CREATED:20220124T201303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220124T202917Z
UID:10003990-1645704000-1645711200@www.jewishannarbor.org
SUMMARY:Is Spinoza Still Salient? Are the Rabbis Really Relevant? Thinking in the Era of Instrumentalized Knowledge-Making
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Gilah Klentenik and Dr. Rachel Rafael Neis\n\n\n\n\n\nThe pressure to produce scholarship that’s relevant and publicly engaged comes as a welcome reproach and corrective to the elitism and insulation of academia. Yet\, what is the cost of such a product-driven mindset with its embeddedness in market ideologies and neoliberal deliverables? How do the logics that subsidize this “Western” enterprise marginalize divergent voices and sideline alternative methods? Turning to the rabbis of late antiquity and early modern Spinoza\, opens us to seeing our particular academic enterprises and\, more broadly still\, the state of being human\, differently. This dares us to consider: what might it mean to think in the absence of teleology\, anthropocentrism\, and their supremacist rationales? \nRegister for the Zoom stream here: https://myumi.ch/y99w4 \nGilah Kletenik\, a scholar of philosophy and Jewish thought\, and Rafe Neis\, an historian of ancient Judaism\, come together to talk about teleology\, being human\, and the possibilities for meaning-making.
URL:https://www.jewishannarbor.org/event/is-spinoza-still-salient-are-the-rabbis-really-relevant-thinking-in-the-era-of-instrumentalized-knowledge-making/
LOCATION:Thayer Building – Room 2022\, 202 South Thayer St\, Ann Arbor\, MI\, 48104\, United States
CATEGORIES:UM Frankel Center for Judaic Studies
ORGANIZER;CN="University of Michigan Frankel Center for Judaic Studies":MAILTO:JudaicStudies@umich.edu
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