HIST 2154

HIST 2154

Course information provided by the 2026-2027 Catalog.

Jewish men and women in early modern Europe lived their lives within a gendered social order inherited from the Talmudic period. The relationship between sex and power remained fundamental to Jewish communal discipline until the eighteenth century. The explosion of vernacular publishing, increasing economic and geographic mobility and the coming of emancipation challenged existing gender norms and liberated Jewish desire - well, almost. As we will see, modernity has an ambiguous effect on Jewish sexual expression and Jewish sexual politics. It is not clear that the emancipation of Jewish men had the same emancipatory effect on Jewish women. Jewish patriarchy proved unexpectedly resilient. In this course, we will explore why - despite Judaism's reputation for liberal attitudes to sex - neither most Jewish men nor many Jewish women embraced the possibilities of personal liberation from a reproductive regime of rigid self-control and near compulsory heterosexual monogamy. (HIST-HEU)


Distribution Requirements (HST-AS, SCD-AS)

Program Requirements (HIST-HEU)

Last 4 Terms Offered (None)

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: JWST 2851RELST 2154

  • 4 Credits Stdnt Opt

  • 12319 HIST 2154   SEM 101

    • MW
    • Aug 24 - Dec 7, 2026
    • Litvak, O

  • Instruction Mode: In Person