"Quantifying Contemporary Antisemitism: Challenges and Findings from North America and Europe"
Ayal Feinberg, Assistant Professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University-Commerce
The Benjamin (Yale 1962) and Barbara Zucker Lecture Series
Ayal Feinberg, Assistant Professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University-Commerce
The Benjamin (Yale 1962) and Barbara Zucker Lecture Series
Panel Discussion:
Céline Masson, Professor at University of Picardy Jules Vernes
Béatrice Madiot, Associate Professor in Social Psychology, University of Picardy Jules Vernes
Jean Szlamowicz, Professor in Linguistics and Translation Studies, University of Burgundy
The Benjamin (Yale 1962) and Barbara Zucker Lecture Series
Yana Grinshpun, Associate Professor in Language Sciences, Paris III-Sorbonne Nouvelle University
The Benjamin (Yale 1962) and Barbara Zucker Lecture Series
The Modern Europe Colloquium presents, “Populism Then and Now: A Symposium,” featuring:
Paul Hanebrink, Professor at Rutgers University, New Brunswick; author of A Specter Haunting Europe: The Myth of Judeo-Bolshevism.
Federico Finchelstein, Professor at The New School; author of From Fascism to Populism in History.
Bruno Chaouat, Professor at the University of Minnesota; author of Is Theory Good for the Jews?
Moderated By: Carolyn J. Dean, Charles J. Stille Professor of History & French at Yale University
A light reception follows
Panel discussion: Daniel Boyarin (University of California at Berkeley), Naomi Seidman (University of Toronto), Eliyahu Stern (Yale), Noreen Khawaja (Yale), Paul North (Yale).
Book panel: Carolyn J. Dean (Yale), Adam Stern (Yale), Cathy Caruth (Cornell), Thomas Keenan (Bard), Hannah Pollin-Galay (Tel Aviv), Michael Roth (Wesleyan).
Moderated by Samuel Moyn (Yale).
Shaul Magid, Professor of Jewish Studies and Religious Studies, Indiana University
The Benjamin (Yale 1962) and Barbara Zucker Lecture Series
Sarah Hammerschlag, University of Chicago Divinity School.
The Department of Religious Studies is co-sponsoring a talk with the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism and the Program in Judaic Studies Thursday February 21st at 4pm, the Whitney Humanities Center (53 Wall Street, room 208).
For more information, please contact Nancy Levene