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The American Jewish Experience, with Lee Shai Weissbach

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The American Jewish Experience, with Lee Shai Weissbach

Scholar Lee Shai Weissbach, Ph.D., will explore the lasting impact of Jewish life in small-town America when he speaks at Ƭapp on Thursday, December 5, 2013, at 7:30 p.m.

Free and open to the public, the talk, which will be accompanied by intriguing visual images, is sponsored by Ƭapp’s Carl and Dorothy Bennett Center for Judaic Studies. It will take place in the Dolan School of Business Dining Room.

Dr. Weissbach, professor of history at the University of Louisville, will describe how the smaller Jewish communities of the United States came into being and will consider some of the characteristics that made them different from the Jewish communities of America’s large and midsize cities.

“By the 1920s, there were some five hundred smaller cities and towns in the United States with Jewish populations of at least 100 but fewer than 1,000, and the history of these smaller Jewish centers must be taken into account if we are to understand the richness and complexity of the American Jewish experience and appreciate the diversity of small-town society in times past,” said Dr. Weissbach, who edited a special issue of the journal Jewish History on the topic of “Synagogue Architecture in Context.”

Dr. Weissbach served as chair of the History Department at the University of Louisville, where he was associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. In 1996, he was awarded a prestigious National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, and in 2006 he spent a year as a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Haifa in Israel.

His recent publications include “Jewish Life in Small-Town America: A History” (Yale University Press, 2005), and “A Jewish Life on Three Continents,” an edited and annotated version of his grandfather’s memoir (Stanford University Press, 2013). Professor Weissbach received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Cincinnati and a doctorate from Harvard.

There is limited seating. Call (203) 254-4000, ext. 2066 to reserve a seat.

Photo is of a synagogue in Helena, Montana in 1890, which will be discussed at the talk.

Last modified: 11-11-13 02:57 PM

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