Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Today

Frontier Jews and Black Catholics: New Books in American Religion

Arnold Hall 96 Wentworth Street, Charleston, SC, United States

Over the last few decades, scholars have worked to expand the study of American religion beyond white Protestants, in the process engaging with questions of race, ethnicity, and migration.

After Appomattox: Reconstruction and America’s Jews

Addlestone Library - Room 227 205 Calhoun St, Charleston, SC, United States

The end of the Civil War initiated a period of dramatic hope, disappointment, and transformation in the American South and the nation as a whole.

“A Class of Citizens”: Jews and the Civil War

Arnold Hall 96 Wentworth Street, Charleston, SC, United States

Part 2 of a mini-course offering an overview of the history of Jews in the southern United States from colonial times until the present.

“The Quiet Voices”: Jews and the Civil Rights Movement

Arnold Hall 96 Wentworth Street, Charleston, SC, United States

Part 3 of a mini-course offering an overview of the history of Jews in the southern United States from colonial times until the present. We will explore some of the key events of southern Jewish history, seeking to understand how Jews have confounded, complicated, and conformed to the region’s “peculiar” norms and categories. Presented by Dr. Shari Rabin, director of the Pearlstine/Lipov Center for Southern Jewish Culture. Free and open to the public.

Capable of Arguing: Southern Jewish Women and Suffrage

Arnold Hall 96 Wentworth Street, Charleston, SC, United States

Southern Jewish women often played leading roles in local and state efforts to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment, whose centennial we celebrate in 2020. They were both Southern Ladies and New Women, fitting in to their societies as they challenged the southern conservative consensus. Women's vote impacted their lives not only in civil society but also in the synagogue.  Our presenter, Leonard Rogoff, holds a doctorate from the University of North Carolina, where he directed the English Writing Laboratory.

Southern Circuits: Intersections of Race, Religion, and Ethnicity on the Nineteenth-Century Stage

SC, United States

Photo: Owens’ Academy of Music, Charleston, SC.
From “Memories of the Professional and Social Life of John E. Owens,” by his wife.

Professor Nathans’ Sunday brunch talk has been CANCELED due to current travel restrictions related to the coronavirus. The program may be rescheduled at a later date. Charleston was a hub of theatrical activity from the colonial period until the early 20th century, as well as a significant site for Jewish and African American cultural encounters. Heather S. Nathans, chair of Tufts University’s Department of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies, will explore the ways Jews were depicted on southern stages.