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Scholarly Webinar/conversation The Objects That Remain

American Jewish Loss after the Holocaust: An Object Lesson

THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2022 AT 11:15 AM – 12:45 PM EDT

The University of Warsaw, American Studies Center

We are pleased to announce the lecture “American Jewish Loss After the Holocaust: An Object Lesson” by Prof. Laura Levitt (Temple University).This lecture is a part of the 2021/2022 Spring Edition of the American Studies Colloquium Series.Join Zoom Meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85864913094Thursday, May 12, 2022
5:15 pm CET

BIO
Laura Levitt is Professor of Religion, Jewish Studies, and Gender at Temple University where she has chaired the Religion Department and directed both the Jewish Studies and the Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies Programs. Levitt is the author The Objects that Remain (2020); American Jewish Loss after the Holocaust (2007); and Jews and Feminism: The Ambivalent Search for Home (1997) and a co-editor of Impossible Images: Contemporary Art After the Holocaust (2003) and Judaism Since Gender (1997). Levitt edits NYU Press’s North American Religions Series with Tracy Fessenden (Arizona State University) and David Harrington Watt (Haverford College).

ABSTRACT
This talk asks critical questions about the future of Holocaust commemoration in the United States. How will the Holocaust continued to be remembered as memory and history come together, as those survivors who have so powerfully told their stories and lived their lives after the Holocaust are coming to their last days.? This talk describes how the Shoah has been commemorated in the United States and what is at stake at this historical crossroad. It addresses what it means to consider “after” as not just after the war, or after the Shoah, but as memory becomes history. It describes how the Holocaust has been remembered in the United States in the past and how it might be remembered going forward. It reconsiders how the loss that is the Shoah is experienced and understood in relation to other American Jewish losses not as competitive memories but rather in terms of how different losses touch and illuminate each other. And finally, it focuses on what will continue to prompt those memories, the people but also increasingly, the objects that occasion these enactments.2 OZNCheck our our entire roster of events at the ASC website: https://www.asc.uw.edu.pl/…/american-studies…/..

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Scholarly Webinar/conversation The Objects That Remain

The Objects that Remain: The Ethics of Tending to Sacred Objects: A Webinar

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2021 • 5 PM, via Zoom
Free and open to the public

To watch this program: https://udel.zoom.us/rec/play/OD4_OUmupDXCC-NdbZ1-d5t8baq5VMZJbV07wSRyvvs1LMToghL3RGHts08dEnoAaoSeRDava3jLBrWi.V9Hf5mjKbJQt61aa?continueMode=true&_x_zm_rtaid=LoI_MYOQSRWFddoRptXYow.1635440425090.3bd309e7697c958a858ffa575e67123a&_x_zm_rhtaid=541

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Scholarly Blog Scholarly Webinar/conversation

HOLY UNCERTAINTY AND THE PROMISE OF MORE INTERSECTIONAL ENGAGEMENTS: REFLECTIONS ON THE LEGACY OF DABRU EMET

LAURA LEVITT

I come to this discussion out of the religion department at Temple University, once a leading center for post-Holocaust Jewish–Christian exchange. While each were in graduate school, Katharina von Kellenbach and Susannah Heschel (then at the University of Pennsylvania) were both very much engaged in these conversations in Philadelphia.

I arrived at Temple just after those heady days and was not a part of those theological and ethical discussions. I came to post-Holocaust work following the literary turn in that scholarship, working more closely with scholars of literature than with theologians and ethicists. But traces of the Temple University legacy continued.

Some of my first graduate students were German exchange students who came to Temple out of the work of my predecessors. They, too, wanted to work across difference, but their work, like my own, was informed by feminist, literary, and critical theory, and Holocaust memory. Working with my womanist ethicist colleague Katie Geneva Cannon, those students came to ask ethical questions about gender, sexuality, and race. My own first doctoral student wrote about the literary turn in New Testament scholarship after the Holocaust with attention to parables. Later, in Switzerland for her second Ph.D. at Basel, she wrote a book about passion narratives after the Holocaust. These experiences and these commitments inform my engagement with this forum and the many powerful essays that it has occasioned.

To read more: https://www.american-religion.org/dabruemet/levitt?fbclid=IwAR1OBV5b-fACrTqfu85viSXaBTb_16a0BkAIg7KmacKwRAopQsvz2CvCiNc

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Scholarly Webinar/conversation The Objects That Remain

Special Issue of CrossCurrents: Jewish Objects, Jewish Affects

For this whole issue see, https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/44290

This issue includes both my essay “Contemporary Relics” and a wonderful conversation about Jewish Objects and Jewish Affects with Jodi Eichler-Levine, Rachel B. Gross, Laura Arnold Liebman, and me.

Categories
Scholarly Webinar/conversation

Religion and Grief, Religion & Series

Center Conversation on the State of Religion in the Current Moment, Religion and American Culture, IUPPI, April 15, 2021, (online) https://www.facebook.com/groups/742284435881210