Wikipedia

Nathaniel Deutsch

Nathaniel Deutsch is a professor at The University of California, Santa Cruz, where he holds the Baumgarten Endowed Chair in Jewish Studies and is also the Director of the Center for Jewish Studies and the Director of The Humanities Institute.

Career

Deutsch attended the University of Chicago, where he received his Ph.D. as well as his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees.

Deutsch was formerly a professor at Swarthmore College, a visiting professor at Stanford University, and the Workmen's Circle/Dr. Emanuel Patt Visiting Professor in Eastern European Jewish Studies at the YIVO Institute. In 2006, Deutsch was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to support his research on the Jewish ethnographer S. An-sky.

In 2007, The New York Times ran an op-ed piece in which Deutsch called for the Bush administration to take immediate action to preserve the Iraqi Mandean community.[1]

Along with Michael Casper, Deutsch is the co-author of A Fortress in Brooklyn: Race, Real Estate, and the Making of Hasidic Williamsburg, which will be published in May, 2021 by Yale University Press.

Works

  • A Fortress in Brooklyn: Race, Real Estate, and the Making of Hasidic Williamsburg (with Michael Casper)
  • The Lost World of Russia's Jews: Ethnography and Folklore in the Pale of Settlement (forthcoming translation with Noah Barrera of Abraham Rechtman's memoir).
  • The Jewish Dark Continent: Life and Death in the Russian Pale of Settlement (2011)
  • Inventing America's 'Worst' Family; Eugenics, Islam and the Fall and Rise of The Tribe of Ishmael (2009)
  • The Maiden of Ludmir: A Jewish Holy Woman and Her World (2003)
  • Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism (2000, co-editor with Yvonne Chireau)
    • Black Jews and black-Jewish relations in the United States
  • The Gnostic Imagination: Gnosticism, Mandaeism, and Merkabah Mysticism (1995)
  • Guardians of the Gate: Angelic Vice Regency in Late Antiquity (1999)

References

  1. ^ "Save the Gnostics" by Nathaniel Deutsch, October 6, 2007, New York Times.

External links


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