HEB 101 Elementary Modern Hebrew 1Credits: 5 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LAB
View Schedule
The first stage in learning Modern Hebrew - Reading, writing and elementary grammar. At this level, students become familiar with a basic vocabulary of 400 words, around which conversational exercises and classroom learning are built. A cultural segment makes the learning process relevant.
| | HEB 102 Elementary Modern Hebrew 2Credits: 5 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: HEB 101 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LAB
View Schedule
Encourages improvement of reading and writing skills, and conversation. Studies complex verbal patterns and daily use of the language in an Israeli setting.
|
|
HEB 201 Intermediate Hebrew 1Credits: 5 Semester: F Prerequisites: HEB 102 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Involves review and mastery of materials learned in HEB 101 and HEB 102. Concentrates on reading and discussing newspaper articles, writing letters and filling out forms and documents (job applications, postal claim forms, and so forth) which are useful for travel. Stresses understanding of basic cultural patterns.
| | HEB 202 Intermediate Hebrew 2Credits: 5 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: HEB 201 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Concentrates on review and mastery of material learned in HEB 201. Continuation of irregular verbs and verbal patterns. Stresses oral comprehension and speech, reading, and discussion of newspaper articles.
|
|
JDS 101 Introduction to Jewish History Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Major political, social, and theological trends in Jewish history, from the formation of ancient Israel until the present day.
| | JDS 102 Crises in Jewish History Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Six issues in Jewish history and their impact on the development of Judaism and the Jewish community; analyzes the resilience and adaptability of a people under stress.
|
|
JDS 111 Great Jewish BooksCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces and analyzes great works of Jewish literature from ancient to modern times: the Bible, Talmud; Guide for the Perplexed; poetry of the golden age in Spain; the great moderns, such as Agnon.
| | JDS 112 Women in the Jewish FamilyCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Comparative contemporary social and psychological studies of the woman intermingle with rabbinic ones in an endeavor to bring into sharper focus women's status, social roles, behavior, and impact on Jewish life; the Jewish woman in historical perspective, drawing upon oriental, European, and modern American societies.
|
|
JDS 141 Introduction to Yiddish I Credits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Students acquire the fundamentals of the sound system of Yiddish structure and basic reading and writing skills.
| | JDS 142 Introduction to Yiddish II Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: JDS 141 Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Second semester of introductory course.
|
|
JDS 201 Israel and the Ancient Near East Credits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
People of the Bible; the environment in which they lived; what they absorbed and rejected from Mesopotamia, Syria, Anatolia, Iran, Egypt.
| | JDS 202 Israel and the Emergence of Judaism Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Post-biblical Jews and Judaism; their adaptation to Greco-Roman life; rise of Jewish sectarianism; writing of the Talmud.
|
|
JDS 203 Introduction to Judaism Credits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Judaism and the rich Jewish legacy: basic philosophical, theological, social, and political values of Judaism.
| | JDS 204 Seminar in Jewish Ethics Credits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Ethical principles of Judaism: love, justice, holiness, freedom of will, dignity of humans, purpose of life, imitatio dei, family life, education, social welfare, race, and ecology.
|
|
JDS 205 Historical Geography and Archaeology of Israel Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Methods and results of excavation in Israel; development of material culture (pottery, architecture, and so forth) and its interpretation.
| | JDS 206 Chassidic PhilosophyCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Unity of God; purpose of life; love and fear of God; significance of Jewish ritual holidays according to the various Chassidic groups.
|
|
JDS 207 Women in Jewish SocietyCredits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: JDS 112 or JDS 209 Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Status of women in the structure of Jewish law. Emphasizes the variety of stresses, both legal and social, placed on Jewish women from ancient times to the contemporary world.
| | JDS 209 Women in Jewish Literature Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Woman's role in classical Jewish literature; Pentateuchal narrative, Chronicles, Song of Songs, and the books of Ruth and Esther.
|
|
JDS 210 Introduction to the Old Testament Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Critical and thematic, historic literary study of the roots of Judeo-Christian tradition as recorded in the Law, Prophets, and the Writings of ancient Israel; different methods of biblical criticism.
| | JDS 214 The American Jewish Woman Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Relationships and conflicts that shaped the identity of the American Jewish woman: Jewish women and the American women’s rights movement; immigrant Jewish women and labor activism; impact of feminism on Judaism.
|
|
JDS 225 Modern Jewish Thought Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Concerns of Jewish religion today: faith, practice, Israel, the Holocaust, science, and the deity - according to Hermann Cohen, Leo Baeck, Franz Rosenzweig, Martin Buber, Abraham Heschel, and Mordecai Kaplan.
| | JDS 229 The Jew in Medieval Times Credits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Poets, philosophers, mathematicians, bankers, traders: how they and their families lived within and outside the ghettos of the Middle East and Europe.
|
|
JDS 230 Modern Jewish History Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Jewish experience from 1770 to the present day; ethnic origins and backgrounds of contemporary Jewry in the United States, Canada, and Israel.
| | JDS 235 The American Jewish Experience Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
American Jewish life from colonial beginnings to the present: immigration; assimilation; social mobility; education and the family; group identity.
|
|
JDS 237 History of Israel and Zionism Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Development of the Zionist idea and its implementation; Israel and its historic purpose as a center of religious and political hope.
| | JDS 242 Hebrew Literature in Translation Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Readings of the major Hebrew authors from the Haskalah (nineteenth-century Hebrew language renaissance) until today's writers in Israel and America. Themes emphasize cultural survival and other current topics in Hebrew literature.
|
|
JDS 250 Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Credits: 5 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Reading and understanding the Hebrew Bible without recourse to complicated grammatical exegeses; stresses fundamentals, not the problems of the language.
| | JDS 253 Ethics of the Jewish Bible Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
An in-depth look at key biblical events, including the creation, humans' first sin, the sin of the golden calf. What do these events mean? What is their symbolic significance?
|
|
JDS 254 Rashi's Commentaries on the Bible Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Rashi's interpretive methods as compared to those of Ibn Ezra, Nachmanides, and the Kimchis.
| | JDS 255 Aggada: Jewish Story LineCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Jewish folklore elements as presented in the Talmud, Midrash, and later rabbinic literature: stories, riddles, parables, homilies, proverbs, songs, and aphorisms about and of the rabbis.
|
|
JDS 260 Midrash: Rabbinic Exegesis Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 229 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys the fascinating and creative literary devices and novel interpretation of Biblical narratives by Talmudic Age of the rabbinic scholars.
| | JDS 261 Responsa Literature Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 229 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys the Responsa literature that answers every day life questions and that began in the post-Talmudic period and has continued to flourish until the present.
|
|
JDS 262 Topics in Hebrew Language and Literature Credits: 3 Semester: F Sp Prerequisites: Permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Complements the offerings of Judaic Studies. Hebrew grammar or that of other Semitic languages (not Arabic) and reading of various periods' literary texts in the original tongue.
| | JDS 265 Readings in the Hebrew BibleCredits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: JDS 250 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Readings of selected texts in the Hebrew Bible, in Hebrew, for beginning students to introduce the various literary topics, improve reading skills, develop vocabulary, and review basic grammar.
|
|
JDS 266 Minor Hebrew ProphetsCredits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: JDS 265 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Book of Amos and other minor prophets in Hebrew; analyzes the style of Hebrew prophecy; grammatical exercises to improve and reinforce knowledge of syntax and vocabulary construction.
| | JDS 267 Wisdom Literature in the Hebrew Bible Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: JDS 265 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Selections from the books of Proverbs and Psalms in Hebrew illustrating the styles of this type of didactic literature, Hebrew Bible, and poetry.
|
|
JDS 280 Jewish MysticismCredits: 3 Semester: F Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Jewish outlook concerning the mysteries of creation, the mystical concepts of the soul, reincarnation.
| | JDS 283 The Holocaust and Jewish Law Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Full range of legal and ethical problems posed during the Holocaust and the precedent-setting decisions set down in the Responsa literature.
|
|
JDS 284 Israel and Jewish Law Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces a full range of legal, ethical, and theological issues that surround the status of biblical and talmudic Israel; legal and theological questions that emerge and reemerge at the establishment of a modern Jewish state.
| | JDS 285 Talmudic Law Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Introduces various processes, synthetic and analytic, out of which Jewish law developed its intricate legal systems.
|
|
JDS 288 Old Testament Prophets Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Prophetic vision of the Old Testament and its relations to life realities of the people of Israel - personal; social; political. Uses biblical texts in translation.
| | JDS 295 Development of Jewish LawCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Historical, sociological, and legal concerns in early and later rabbinic literature that led to an understanding of the trends of Jewish legal history through the centuries.
|
|
JDS 296 Jewish Business EthicsCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys Jewish business attitudes from the perspective of Jewish law and ethics. Familiarizes students with the history and development of Jewish business law and ethics, and introduces them to a comparative study of Jewish and American law relating to business and economic issues.
| | JDS 302 Art and Archaeology of Ancient Assyria Credits: 3 Semester: Sp Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
The history and development of ancient Assyrian culture; focuses on how individual strains of different cultures in the variegated peoples that make up the ancestry and contemporaries of the historical Assyrians can be reworked by these ancient peoples to create a sense of common heritage; the relationship between ancient Assyria and biblical history.
|
|
JDS 304 Mesopotamian Archaeology Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: None Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies the masterpieces of the architecture, painting, and sculpture of the societies that lived in the Tigris and Euphrates Valleys until the era of the Persian Empire.
| | JDS 382 Topics in Talmudic Law Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 283, or JDS 284, or JDS 285, or JDS 295, or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Specialized studies of how specific Jewish laws developed and their relationship to intricate legal systems, including civil and ritual law in Judaism.
|
|
JDS 384 Maimonides: His Life and WorksCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: junior status Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Maimonides' life in Spain, Palestine, and Egypt; Maimonides and Aristotelian philosophy; the Mishnah Torah, the Guide for the Perplexed, and the Thirteen Principles of Faith.
| | JDS 385 Maimonides: The Guide for the Perplexed Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 384 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Uses the actual text as a foundation for this course as fundamental issues of Judaism are viewed through the eyes of Maimonides.
|
|
JDS 391 The Feminine in Kabbalah Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 280 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines the symbolic position of the feminine in Jewish mystical tradition through intensive, close reading of primary sources of kabbalistic texts, many of which have not yet been translated into English. The instructor translates and provides photocopies of several of these readings.
| | JDS 396 Jewish Medical EthicsCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: junior status Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Jewish moral, ethical, and religious principles in medical practice: use of Jewish legal response to abortion; definition of death; euthanasia; contraception; sterilization; semen testing; artificial insemination; circumcision; organ transplants; sex changes; religious observations in the hospital.
|
|
JDS 399 Redemption in Jewish Thought Credits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: junior status Corequisites: None Type: LEC
View Schedule
A comprehensive study of Judaism's view of redemption and the world to come.
| | JDS 401 Aspects of American Jewish HistoryCredits: 3 Semester: Prerequisites: JDS 235 or permission of instructor Corequisites: None Type: SEM
View Schedule
Selected topics in American Jewish history emphasizing the period since the East European migration (1890s); reciprocal impact of America on Jews and that of Jews on the cultural development of the United States.
|
|