Jewish studies at Kenyon are highly interdisciplinary, inviting students to explore historical and contemporary manifestations of Jewish civilization in diverse cultural contexts from the perspectives of many different modern academic disciplines. As a combination of fields, methods and disciplines, Jewish studies is thus quintessentially inclusive and comparative, transnational and international. Students of all backgrounds learn how to critically assess competing ideas and how to analyze intersecting identities within their social contexts, as well as tracing the ways Jewish traditions have informed major systems of thought and governance.

Study Abroad

Students interested in Jewish studies are encouraged to study abroad as an immersive opportunity to take in Jewish culture and history. While the Jewish global diaspora is vast and many traditional study abroad programs can be adapted toward Jewish studies interests. The CET Prague program includes a specific Jewish studies component.

Languages

Kenyon offers at least four languages that directly relate to Jewish studies. In particular, Russian, German, Arabic and Spanish. Students who wish to take Hebrew currently do so through summer programs listed below.

Recent Student Projects

Ellie Greenberg ‘25

Senior Capstone on Jewish Masculinity

Ellie Greenberg ‘25, a religious studies major, kicked off her senior honors capstone student research with a summer internship with Brandeis University’s Hadassah Institute program. While serving as a research assistant, Greenberg drafted her own first thesis chapter on the podcaster, Ben Shapiro. Her second chapter soon followed during senior seminar, analyzing Jewish masculinity, American Civic religion, and whiteness in the media platform of Dennis Prager. Greenberg used her research to guest lecture about Jewish Masculinity in Professor Dalton’s RLST 165 Jew-ish in a Modern World Course. She also presented her research at two conferences: the Midwest American Academy of Religion and the Indiana University Graduate Student Conference.

Incantation Bowls

Students in RLST 205 Jewish Magic, Mysticism, and Kabbalah partnered with the Kenyon College Craft Center to make personalized incantation bowls. Incantation bowls from late antique Babylonia (modern day Iraq and Iran) were produced from the sixth to eighth centuries C.E. in Jewish Aramaic and represent a vibrant material culture of Jews and their neighbors in the ancient world. These bowls were often buried and meant to capture demons who might inhabit a particular dwelling (like a mouse trap!)

Krista Dalton

Associate Professor of Religious Studies
Contact
Email Address
dalton1@kenyon.edu
Location
O'Connor House
99 College St.
Gambier, OH 43022
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