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Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life
Rutgers Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life

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Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life

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Symposium on Black and Jewish Americans

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Devlin, Rachel

  • Rachel Devlin is a professor of history at Rutgers University–New Brunswick. Her scholarship centers on the cultural and social politics of girlhood, sexuality, and race in the United States after World War II. Her most recent book, A Girl Stands at the Door: The Generation of Young Women who Desegregated America's Schools (Basic Books, 2018), considers the disproportionate number of girls and young women who filed lawsuits prior to Brown v. Board of Education, and who were desegregation "firsts" at historically white schools in the early 1960s. Devlin teaches courses on the postwar period in the United States, the history of childhood, the history of sexuality, and women and gender in American history.

Stephens, Michelle

  • Michelle Stephens is the founding executive director of the Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice and a professor of English and Latino and Hispanic Caribbean Studies at Rutgers University–New Brunswick. She is also a psychoanalyst and served as dean of the humanities in the Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences. She is the author of Black Empire: The Masculine Global Imaginary of Caribbean Intellectuals in the United States, 1914 to 1962 (Duke University Press, 2005) and Skin Acts: Race, Psychoanalysis and The Black Male Performer (Duke University Press, 2014). She has published numerous articles on the intersection of race and psychoanalysis in such journals as JAPA, Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, and Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society. She has also coedited three recent collections in archipelagic studies: Archipelagic American Studies with Brian Russell Roberts (Duke, 2017); Relational Undercurrents: Contemporary Art of the Caribbean Archipelago with Tatiana Flores (Duke, 2017); and Contemporary Archipelagic Thinking with Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020). She was a founding series coeditor of Rutgers University Press's Critical Caribbean Studies book series and sits on the editorial advisory board of Rowman and Littlefield's Rethinking the Island book series.

Greenberg, David

  • Position: Professor
  • School: Rutgers University
  • David Greenberg is a professor of History and of Journalism and Media Studies at Rutgers University. He is writing a biography of Congressman John Lewis for Simon & Schuster, for which he has won Guggenheim and Cullman Center fellowships. He is the author or editor of several books on American history and politics including Nixon's Shadow: The History of an Image (2003) and Republic of Spin: An Inside History of the American Presidency (2016). Formerly acting editor of The New Republic and columnist for Slate, he now writes regularly for Politico, Liberties, and many other scholarly and popular publications. He holds a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University and a BA from Yale.

  • Person Type: Co-organizers

Oksman, Tahneer

  • Position: Associate Professor
  • School: Marymount Manhattan College
  • Tahneer Oksman is Associate Professor in the Department of Writing, Literature, and Language, with a joint appointment in the Department of Communication and Media Arts, at Marymount Manhattan College. Her interests revolve around comics and visual narrative, contemporary feminist literature, and memoir studies as well as twentieth- and twenty-first century Jewish American literature and culture. She is author of “How Come Boys Get to Keep Their Noses?”: Women and Jewish American Identity in Contemporary Graphic Memoirs, and co-editor of Feminists Reclaim Mentorship: An Anthology. More of her writing can be found on tahneeroksman.com.

  • Person Type: Co-organizers

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