Futures of Jewish Theology
Schedule
Thu Dec 01 2022 at 12:30 pm to 03:30 pm
Location
Dinner Board Room, Flora Lamson Hewlett Library | Berkeley, CA
About this Event
Please join the GTU's Richard S. Dinner Center for Jewish Studies for a hybrid event on the "Futures of Jewish Theology," featuring Joy Ladin (Yeshiva University), Mara Benjamin (Mount Holyoke College), and Ariel Mayse (Stanford University), moderated by Sam S.B. Shonkoff (GTU).
This event will be offered in a hybrid format, with the in-person location taking place in the Dinner Boardroom in the GTU Library. A registration link to attend in-person will be available soon.
Click Here for Zoom Registration
Panelists:
Mara Benjamin’s research interests center on Jewish ideas and practices in the modern period. Benjamin’s most recent book, The Obligated Self: Maternal Subjectivity and Jewish Thought (Indiana University Press, 2018), investigates the religious dimensions of caring for young children in the context of Jewish thought and tradition. In this book, Benjamin argues that the physical and psychological work of caring for children presents theologically fruitful - but largely unexplored - terrain for feminists. Benjamin joined the faculty of Mount Holyoke College in 2017. Previously, she served on the faculty position at St. Olaf College, was the Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale University, and held the Hazel D. Cole Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Washington.
Joy Ladin
Ariel Evan Mayse joined the faculty of Stanford University in 2017 as an assistant professor in the Department of Religious Studies, after previously serving as the Director of Jewish Studies and Visiting Assistant Professor of Modern Jewish Thought at Hebrew College in Newton, Massachusetts, and a research fellow at the Frankel Institute for Advanced Judaic Studies of the University of Michigan. Mayse holds a Ph.D. in Jewish Studies from Harvard University and rabbinic ordination from Beit Midrash Har’el in Israel. His current research examines the role of language in Hasidism, manuscript theory and the formation of early Hasidic literature, the renaissance of Jewish mysticism in the nineteenth and twentieth century, the relationship between spirituality and law in Jewish legal writings, and the resources of Jewish thought and theology for constructing contemporary environmental ethics.
Moderator:
Sam S.B. Shonkoff is the Taube Family Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies at the GTU's Richard S. Dinner Center for Jewish Studies, where he teaches on Jewish religious thought as well as methods in the study of religion. His scholarship focuses primarily on German-Jewish and Hasidic theologies, as well as appropriations of Hasidic spirituality in relatively secular spheres.
Where is it happening?
Dinner Board Room, Flora Lamson Hewlett Library, 2400 Ridge Road, Berkeley, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
USD 0.00