Campus News

UB to establish new Department of Jewish Thought

Department of Jewish Thought faculty members Marla Segol, Alex Green, Chair Richard Cohen, Noam Pines, Sergey Dolgopolski and Lilia Dolgopolskaia.

Faculty comprising the new Department of Jewish Thought are, from left, Marla Segol, Alex Green, Chair Richard Cohen, Noam Pines, Sergey Dolgopolski and Lilia Dolgopolskaia. Photo: Nancy J. Parisi

By BERT GAMBINI

Published December 16, 2015 This content is archived.

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“This is not vocational training. This is teaching from among the basic strands of humanity in the Western world. ”
Richard Cohen, professor and director
Department of Jewish Thought

UB will launch a new department at the end of the current semester dedicated to the academic study of the Jewish intellectual tradition in the development of Western civilization. The highly interdisciplinary department will foster inquiry, knowledge and understanding through innovative scholarship and teaching that explores the rich philosophical and spiritual contributions of Jewish culture from antiquity to the present.

The Department of Jewish Thought in the College of Arts of Sciences will be oriented toward theory and philosophy with an emphasis on ethics, the central and unifying feature throughout the long and diverse history of Judaism. The new department builds on the foundation of the university’s Institute of Jewish Thought and Heritage (IJTH).

“UB is recognized nationally for our excellent and innovative research and education in the humanities,” Provost Charles F. Zukoski says. “The Department of Jewish Thought will contribute to this tradition by building on the unique approach that our faculty have been pursuing through the Institute of Jewish Thought and Heritage, making these programs more accessible and visible to our students.”

Established in 2008, the IJTH has since 2012 offered a BA in Jewish studies, as well as a minor in Jewish studies, but the new department will have an identity that distinguishes it from similar programs and departments at other colleges and universities.

“We are deliberately being called the Department of Jewish Thought because that is our particular orientation of Jewish studies,” says Richard Cohen, professor of philosophy and director of the IJTH. “There are many departments of Jewish studies engaged primarily in history and philology, but at UB as a department within the humanities, we’re highlighting ethics, which relates us to philosophy and to some of the greatest philosophers of the last 150 years, such thinkers as Henri Bergson, Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig and Emanuel Levinas.”

“Creating this department is a testament to the continuing support of UB for the humanities and a desire for the campus to be a leader across the spectrum of humanities scholarship,” adds CAS Dean E. Bruce Pitman.

While ethics, the biblically inspired teachings of morality and the prophetic call to justice will form the department’s core, guiding its direction and providing definition, its contours still will consist of components in history, semiotics and language. Cohen says the focus will be on humanism and a fluency in its related disciplines.

“It’s what’s needed today,” he says. “This is not vocational training. This is teaching from among the basic strands of humanity in the Western world.”

The interdisciplinary department will deeply engage students in the grand spiritual tradition of the West and the self-reflective dimension of civilization, both in terms of philosophy and religion, Cohen says.

Since 2008, the IJTH has hired five full-time faculty members with expertise ranging from the Jewish philosophical tradition, the Talmud, Jewish mysticism and the Kabbalah, rationalist Jewish thought and comparative study of Jewish literature.

“This is a research-oriented faculty with extensive teaching experience,” Cohen says. “All five of us have published books in the last two years and all five of us are currently working on books.”

Cohen is grateful to the university, the College of Arts and Sciences, and members of the Western New York Jewish community — two of whom have provided support for two endowed professorships — for helping to make the new department a reality.

“It’s thrilling to have reached the moment,” he says.