Our stories give us hope in challenging times. Support JWA by Dec. 31.
Close [x]

Show [+]

Historians in the United States

by Marsha L. Rozenblit
Last updated

Deborah Lipstadt.
Photograph by Jillian Edelstein, courtesy of Deborah Lipstadt.
In Brief

Jewish women have done pioneering work in developing the field of social history, women’s history, and Jewish history as those fields grew in the 1970s and after. Sensitive to the situation of minority groups, Jewish women became prominent in these fields. Such was especially the case in American and European women’s history, where historians like Joan Wallach Scott, Kathryn Kish Sklar, Alice Kessler-Harris played leading roles in developing the field. In Jewish history as well, Jewish women such as Paula Hyman and Marion Kaplan made major contributions both to the field in general and to the focus on women’s experience in particular.

American Jewish women have been prominent within the historical profession. Indeed, many have been on the cutting edge of historical scholarship since the 1960s. In particular, Jewish women were at the forefront of developments within social history and in the creation of women’s history. While women generally, and Jewish women in particular, rarely made careers as historians in the first half of the twentieth century, Jewish women represented a significant proportion of academic historians both in American and European history as discrimination against Jews and prejudice against women lessened in the decades after World War II. Perhaps because of their sensitivity to the situation of powerless groups, most of them focused their attention not on traditional power elites but rather on those social groups traditionally ignored by academic historians: ordinary people, workers, peasants, minority groups, Jews, and especially women. They helped create, and were influenced by, new trends in historical scholarship that favored the study of such groups.

Social History

Many Jewish women became leading social historians as that field developed in the 1960s and 1970s. European historians like Natalie Zemon Davis and Joan Wallach Scott and American historians like Tamara Hareven greatly influenced how historians came to view the lives and relationships of peasants and workers. In a series of groundbreaking articles, published by Stanford University Press in 1975 as Society and Culture in Early Modern France: Eight Essays, Davis presented a breathtaking view of family relationships, daily life, and religion among peasants in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century France. Her ability to use archival material about ordinary people and to tease out of the records the details of everyday life has influenced students during her long and distinguished academic career at Brown University (1959–1963), the University of Toronto (1963–1971), the University of California at Berkeley (1971–1977), and Princeton University from 1978 until her retirement in 1996. Her collaboration as historical adviser to the successful popular film The Return of Martin Guerre brought her insights about peasant life in sixteenth-century France to the general public. She shared the results of her investigation into this court case, and her understanding of sixteenth-century family life, marital relations, and religious views, in a 1983 book The Return of Martin Guerre (Harvard University Press). Davis also published Fiction in the Archives: Pardon Tales and Their Tellers in Sixteenth-Century France (Stanford University Press, 1987), The Gift in Sixteenth-Century France (University of Wisconsin Press, 2000), and Trickster Travels: A Sixteenth-Century Muslim Between Worlds (Hill and Wang, 2006).

Both Joan Wallach Scott and Tamara Hareven devoted themselves to understanding the lives of industrial workers. Scott’s first work, The Glassworkers of Carmaux: French Craftsmen and Political Action in a Nineteenth-Century City (Harvard University Press, 1974), studied the lives of the workers themselves and their relationship to those who exercised power over them. Eschewing traditional labor history’s focus on union activities, Scott was more concerned with the role of work and the community of workers. Hareven focused on American workers, in particular mill workers in New England, and on such demographic issues as marriage and family in the nineteenth century. She wrote (with Randolph Langenbach) Amoskeag: Life and Work in an American Factory-City (Pantheon, 1978) and Family Time and Industrial Time: The Relationship between the Family and Work in a New England Industrial Community (Cambridge University Press, 1982). In addition, she edited a large number of books on American social history, most of them about the development of the family, including Anonymous Americans: Explorations in Nineteenth-Century Social History (Prentice-Hall, 1971), Family and Kin in Urban Communities, 1700–1930 (New Viewpoints, 1977), Family and Population in Nineteenth-Century America (with Maris Vinovskis; Princeton University Press, 1978), and Family History at the Crossroads: A Journal of Family History Reader (with Andrejs Plakans; Princeton University Press, 1987). Before her 2002 death, Hareven focused on workers in Japan, publishing The Silk Workers of Kyoto: Family and Work in a Changing Traditional Industry (University of California Press, 2002).

Lizabeth Cohen, who has taught as a professor at Harvard, has worked extensively in labor and urban history. She has published Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939 (Cambridge University Press, 1990), A Consumer’s Republic: The Politics of Mass Consumption in Post-War America (Knopf, 2003), and Saving America’s Cities: Ed Logue and the Struggle to Renew Urban America in the Suburban Age (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2019). 

Other women who worked in American social history include Mary Flug Handlin, who co-authored with her husband, Harvard professor Oscar Handlin, several books in American political and social history, including studies of the role of government in the economy of Massachusetts before the Civil War, of youth and the family in American history, and of American affluence; and Sheila Rothman, who has published volumes on women and illness, including Woman’s Proper Place: A History of Changing Ideas and Practices (Basic Books, 1978), Living in the Shadow of Death: Tuberculosis and the Social Experience of Illness in American History (Basic Books, 1994), and, with her husband David Rothman, Willowbrook Wars (Harper and Row, 1984) and Pursuit of Perfection: The Promise and Perils of Medical Enhancement (Pantheon, 2003).

Pioneering Women’s History

By the 1970s, many of these social historians helped develop the newly emerging field of women’s history. They were all utterly honest in admitting that their involvement as feminists in the women’s movement had influenced their intellectual focus. Joan Wallach Scott best exemplifies this trend among European historians. Born in Brooklyn in 1941, educated at Brandeis and the University of Wisconsin, Scott began her career studying French workers, but all of her subsequent work, which continues to deal with power relations and hierarchies, has been on women and gender. She started, naturally enough, with a concern for women workers, publishing in 1978 a book with fellow social historian Louise Tilly titled Women, Work, and Family (Holt, Rinehart and Winston). In the preface to the second edition (Routledge, 1987), the authors declared that feminist debates about women had made them wonder about the impact of the Industrial Revolution and the new forms of women’s work that it created on the role of women within the family. After much research, they concluded that industrial wage work did not change that role, nor did it liberate women from traditional power relations within the family. They called on historians to think of women, work, and family as inseparable and interdependent categories. In many subsequent books, including Gender and the Politics of History (Columbia University Press, 1988), Only Paradoxes to Offer: French Feminists and the Rights of Man (Harvard University Press, 1996), Parité: Sexual Equality and the Crisis of French Universalism (University of Chicago Press, 2005), The Politics of the Veil (Princeton University Press, 2007), and The Fantasy of Feminist History (Duke University Press, 2011), Scott has continued to deal with women and gender, feminism, and power relations. In a teaching career at the University of Illinois, Chicago Circle (1970–1972), Northwestern (1972–1974), the University of North Carolina (1974–1980), Brown University (1980–1985), and the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton (1985 until her retirement in 2014), Scott has trained several generations of European women’s historians.

Like Scott, other European women’s historians also understood that their scholarly concerns derived from and could contribute to their political interests. That is, they chose to write women’s history because they were active feminists, committed to the struggle for equality for women. In a book edited with Claudia Koonz, Becoming Visible: Women in European History (Houghton Mifflin, 1977), Renate Bridenthal, for example, indicated that her work was born out of the women’s movement. Like other women’s historians, she sought to abandon male models of history and explore the experience of women from a feminist perspective. Similarly, in the introduction to their volume When Biology Became Destiny: Women in Weimar and Nazi Germany (Monthly Review Press, 1984), Renate Bridenthal, Atina Grossmann, and Marion Kaplan made it clear that as activists from the 1960s, they intended their book to be a contribution to the feminist movement. Seeking a usable past and concerned with women as agents and victims of history, they wanted to understand how women’s experience interacted with class and ethnic identity. Unlike most women’s historians with Jewish backgrounds, however, Bridenthal, Grossmann, and Kaplan admitted that their backgrounds as women whose families had to flee Nazi Germany because they were Jews also influenced their choice of scholarly subject. Although the book did not focus on German Jewish women, these historians wanted to understand the world of their parents. Grossmann went on to publish Reforming Sex: The German Movement for Birth Control and Abortion Reform, 1920–1950 (Oxford University Press, 1995), and Bridenthal has edited (with Krista O’Donnell and Nancy Reagin) a book on German identity: The Heimat Abroad: The Boundaries of Germanness (University of Michigan Press, 2005). Other European historians who focus on women include Judith Walkowitz, the author of books on prostitution and sexual danger in Victorian England, and Claire Goldberg Moses, who has written on feminism in France.

Many European historians turned to the subject of women as the field grew. Natalie Zemon Davis, for example, published Women on the Margins: Three Seventeenth Century Lives (Harvard University Press, 1995), an analysis of the lives of three very different religious women. Similarly Temma Kaplan, who began her career studying anarchists and other radicals in twentieth-century Spain (Anarchists of Andalusia, 1868–1903 [Princeton University Press, 1977] and Red City, Blue Period: Social Movements in Picasso’s Barcelona [University of California Press, 1992]), subsequently focused on women in radical movements in Spain, Latin America, the United States, and South Africa, publishing Crazy for Democracy: Women in Grassroots Movements (Routledge, 1997) and Taking Back the Streets: Women, Youth, and Direct Democracy (University of California Press, 2004).

Among historians of the United States, Jewish women such as Alice Kessler-Harris, Nancy Cott, Gerda Lerner, Linda Kerber, Ellen Carol Dubois, and Kathryn Kish Sklar took the lead in developing the new field of women’s history in the 1960s and 1970s. Most of these women have devoted all of their scholarly efforts to understanding the role and status of women in American life. Nancy Cott, for example, wrote an influential book on women in the early American republic, The Bonds of Womanhood: “Women’s Sphere” in New England, 1780–1835 (Yale University Press, 1977), which explored how the “cult of domesticity” and the “cult of true womanhood” related to the actual circumstances and experiences of women. In addition, to publishing important collections of documents and articles about American women, Cott published the twenty volumes of the History of Women in the United States: Historical Articles on Women’s Lives and Activities (K.G. Saur, 1992).  Cott, who taught at Yale University from 1975 to 2001 and at Harvard from 2002 until her retirement in 2018, has also written a history of feminism, The Grounding of Modern Feminism (Yale University Press, 1987); edited the letters of Mary Ritter Beard (Yale, 1991); and analyzed the institution of marriage in Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation (Harvard University Press, 2000).

Like Nancy Cott, Kathryn Kish Sklar, a professor at the State University of New York at Binghamton until her retirement in 2012, also explored the “cult of domesticity,” which dominated the lives of middle-class American women in the nineteenth century. Her first book, Catherine Beecher: A Study in American Domesticity (Yale University Press, 1973), greatly influenced the first generation of women’s historians. Sklar has used biography most effectively to explore the lives of individual women and women generally. She has edited the autobiography of American reformer Florence Kelley (1986) and written a biography of the same woman, Florence Kelley and the Nation’s Work: The Rise of Women’s Political Culture, 1830–1900 (Yale University Press, 1995). Like most of her colleagues in women’s history, Sklar has also published collections of articles and documents. She has explored the issue of women’s rights and its relationship to abolitionism in Women’s Rights Emerges within the Anti-Slavery Movement, 1830-1870: A Brief History with Documents (Bedford/St. Mark’s, 2000) and in an edited volume (with James Brewer Stewart), Women’s Rights and Transatlantic Slavery in the Era of Emancipation (Yale University Press, 2007).

Ellen Carol DuBois pioneered in the study of American feminism, a movement in which she herself was an activist. A professor at the University at Buffalo from 1972 to 1988 and at UCLA until her retirement in 2017, she has written and edited numerous books on the women’s movement, including Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an Independent Women’s Movement in America, 1848-1869 (Cornell University Press, 1978), Harriet Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage (Yale University Press, 1997), and Woman Suffrage and Women’s Rights (New York University Press, 1998).

Unlike Cott, Sklar, and DuBois, Linda Kerber did not begin her academic career by writing about women. Her first book was a study of the ideology of the federalists, Federalists in Dissent: Imagery and Ideology in Jeffersonian America (Cornell University Press, 1970). Only later did Kerber, a professor at the University of Iowa since 1971 (now retired), change her focus to deal with women. Her Women of the Republic: Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America (University of North Carolina Press, 1980) was an important analysis of the role of women in the development of revolutionary and republican America. Primarily an intellectual historian, Kerber turned to law and politics in No Constitutional Right to be Ladies: Women and the Obligations of Citizenship (Hill and Wang, 1998). She has also published many collections of essays, including US History as Women’s History: New Feminist Essays (University of North Carolina Press, 1995) and Toward an Intellectual History of Women (University of North Carolina Press, 1997). Widely recognized as one of the leading historians of her generation, Kerber has served as president of the Organization of American Historians (1996–1997) and as president of the American Historical Association (2006–2007). Blanche Wiesen Cook also began her career as a traditional political historian, writing a biography of Dwight David Eisenhower (1981), but she then turned her attention to women, publishing a three-volume biography of Eleanor Roosevelt (Penguin Books, 1993--).

In contrast to Cott, Kerber, and Sklar, who have focused primarily on middle-class women, Alice Kessler-Harris has devoted her scholarship to women workers. A professor at Hofstra University from 1968 to 1988, then at Rutgers and at Columbia (now retired), Kessler-Harris is the author of Women Have Always Worked: A Historical Overview (McGraw-Hill, 1981); Out to Work: A History of Wage-Earning Women in the United States (Oxford University Press, 1982); A Woman’s Wage: Historical Meanings and Social Consequences (University Press of Kentucky, 1990); and Gendering Labor History (University of Illinois Press, 2006). In her 2001 book, In Pursuit of Equity: Women, Men, and the Quest for Economic Citizenship in Twentieth Century America (Oxford University Press), Kessler-Harris explores how gendered ideas became embedded in such twentieth-century U.S. social policies as Social Security, unemployment disbursement, and equal employment opportunity legislation, distorting seemingly neutral social legislation to further limit the freedom and equality of women. Kessler-Harris has also edited several collections of essays and a collection of stories by the Jewish immigrant writer Anzia Yezierska. In A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman (Bloomsbury Press, 2012), Kessler-Harris goes beyond working-class woman to analyze this mid-twentieth century playwright as a Jewish woman from the South, an intellectual, and a participant in many controversial issues of her day.

Cott, Sklar, Kerber, and Kessler-Harris were all born around 1940 in the United States and educated in the 1960s. Gerda Lerner’s life experiences stand in marked contrast to those of these women. Born in Vienna in 1920, she had just completed high school at the time of the Anschluss with Nazi Germany. Although she and her family had the good fortune to be able to immigrate to America, she resumed her education only in the 1960s, obtaining her Ph.D. from Columbia in 1966. Her experiences doubly sensitized her to the experiences of marginalized groups. Her early work focused on black and white women who fought against injustice, in particular against slavery. Her first study, The Grimké Sisters from South Carolina: Rebels Against Slavery (Houghton Mifflin, 1967), dealt with abolitionist women. It has been republished several times. She then went on to publish Black Women in White America: A Documentary History (Pantheon, 1972). A professor at Long Island University (1965–1968), Sarah Lawrence College (1968–1980), and the University of Wisconsin (1980–1991), she also devoted her prodigious scholarly energy to the study of feminism and gender relations, publishing The Majority Finds Its Past: Placing Women in History (Oxford University Press, 1979), The Creation of Patriarchy (Oxford University Press, 1986), The Creation of Feminist Consciousness: From the Middle Ages to Eighteen Seventy (Oxford University Press, 1993), and several collections of documents. Lerner, who died in 2013, wrote several books of autobiography and personal reflections, including Why History Matters: Life and Thought (Oxford University Press, 1997) and Fireweed: A Political Autobiography (Temple University Press, 2002).

From Women to Gender

In the 1970s and early 1980s, most women’s historians concerned themselves with uncovering the experiences of women, both famous and ordinary. By the late 1980s, many of these historians had turned instead to a concern with gender, that is, with the social construction of female (or male) identity. Influenced by developments in literary criticism such as deconstructionism and postmodernism, some women’s historians increasingly turned to theoretical issues. Once again, Joan Wallach Scott was at the forefront of this development. In her Gender and the Politics of History (Columbia University Press, 1988), Scott argued that poststructural theory as developed by Jacques Derrida and Michel Foucault offered feminism a powerful analytic tool to explore how gender hierarchies are constructed and legitimized. In a series of articles, she explored the varied and inherently unstable meanings attached to gender. Always interested in power relations, Scott insisted that studying gender as a category provided an excellent way to analyze all hierarchies of difference in society. Scott hoped that her studies of gender would alert people to inequalities, which could then be rectified. Other volumes of essays, including Learning about Women: Gender, Politics and Power, edited with Jill Ker Conway and Susan Bourque (University of Michigan Press, 1989); Feminists Theorize the Political, edited with Judith Butler (Routledge, 1992); Feminism and History (Oxford, 1996); and Going Public: Feminism and the Shifting Boundaries of the Private Sphere, edited with Debra Keates (University of Illinois Press, 2004), continued these theoretical concerns.

Similarly, Estelle Freedman, who has taught at Stanford University since 1976, turned from analyzing the experiences of women to focusing on feminism and gender. Her early books included Their Sisters’ Keepers: Women’s Prison Reform in America, 1830–1930 (University of Michigan Press, 1981), Intimate Matters: A History of Sexuality in America (with John D’Emilio; Harper and Row, 1988), and Maternal Justice: Miriam Van Waters and the Female Reform Tradition (University of Chicago Press, 1996), but she then explored the relationship between feminism and gender in No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women (Ballantine, 2002) and Feminism, Sexuality, and Politics: Essays (University of North Carolina Press, 2006). She has also edited several books, including a collection of essays on lesbians. In 2013, she published Redefining Rape: Sexual Violence in the Era of Suffrage and Segregation (Harvard University Press). 

Blending Social, Women’s, and Gender History

Other historians have continued to write social history, often with a focus on women and gender. Elaine Tyler May, professor at the University of Minnesota, for example, has written several books on the family in America: Great Expectations: Marriage and Divorce in Post-Victorian America (University of Chicago Press, 1980); Homeward Bound: American Families in the Cold War Era (Basic Books, 1988); Barren in the Promised Land: Childless Americans and the Pursuit of Happiness (Basic Books, 1995), and America and the Pill: A History of Promise, Peril, and Liberation (Basic Books, 2010). She has also written Fortress America: How We Embraced Fear and Abandoned Democracy (Basic Books, 2017). Paula S. Fass, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, has written primarily about children in such books as The Damned and the Beautiful: American Youth in the 1920s (Oxford University Press, 1977), Outside In: Minorities and the Transformation of American Education (Oxford University Press, 1989), Kidnapped: Child Abduction in America (Oxford University Press, 1997), Children of a New World: Society, Culture, and Globalization (New York University Press, 2006), and The End of American Childhood: A History of Parenting from Life on the Frontier to the Managed Child (Princeton University Press, 2016). Regina Morantz-Sanchez of the University of Michigan and a specialist on women in medicine has authored Sympathy and Science (Oxford University Press, 1985) and Conduct Unbecoming a Woman: Medicine on Trial in Turn of the Century Brooklyn (Oxford, 1999). Sonya Michel, professor at the University of Illinois and the University of Maryland (retired), published Children’s Interests/Mother’s Rights: The Shaping of America’s Child Care Policy (Yale University Press, 1999) and several edited collections of articles on gender and the welfare state.

Linda Gordon, who taught at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, the University of Wisconsin, and New York University, began her career by writing about women and birth control in Women’s Body, Women’s Right: A Social History of Birth Control in America (Penguin, 1976), wife abuse in Heroes of Their Own Lives: The Politics and History of Family Violence, Boston, 1880-1960 (Viking, 1988), and single mothers in Pitied but not Entitled: Single Mothers and the History of Welfare, 1890-1935 (Free Press, 1994). She later turned to study the careers of female photographers in Dorothea Lange: A Life beyond Limits (Norton, 2009) and Inge Morath: An Illustrated Biography (Prestel, 2018). After a career of writing about women, she also decided to study the Ku Klux Klan, publishing in 2017 The Second Coming of the KKK: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political Tradition (Liveright). Kathy Peiss, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, wrote two books on women’s social history, Cheap Amusements: Working Women and Leisure in Turn-of-the Century New York (Temple University Press, 1986) and Hope in a Jar: the Making of American Beauty Culture (Henry Holt, 1998), and then studied American society more broadly in Zoot Suit: The Enigmatic Career of an Extreme Style (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011) and Information Hunters: When Librarians, Soldiers, and Spies Banded Together in World War II Europe (Oxford University Press, 2020). Cindy Aron, a women’s historian who retired from the University of Virgini( also studied both men and women in Ladies and Gentlemen of the Civil Service: Middle-Class Workers in Victorian America (Oxford University Press, 1987) and Working at Play: A History of Vacations in the United States (Oxford University Press, 1999). 

On the other hand, Joan Jacobs Brumberg, a professor at Cornell (now retired), began her career writing about an evangelical missionary but devoted most of her career to studying women, publishing Fasting Girls: The Emergence of Anorexia Nervosa as a Modern Disease (Harvard University Press, 1988) and The Body Project: An Intimate History of American Girls (Random House, 1997). Annelise Orleck of Dartmouth College has written extensively about women, focusing mostly on women’s political activism in such books as Common Sense and A Little Fire: Women and Working Class Politics in the United States, 1900-1965 (University of North Carolina Press, 1995), Storming Caesar’s Palace: How Black Mothers Fought Their Own War on Poverty (Beacon, 2005), Rethinking American Women’s Activism (Routledge, 2015), and “We Are All Fast Food Workers Now”: The Global Uprising against Poverty Wages (Beacon, 2018). She has also written about Soviet Jews in the United States in The Soviet Jewish Americans (Greenwood, 1999).

Intellectual and Political History

Not all Jewish women in the historical profession are women’s historians, of course. Many have pursued traditional fields of scholarship. Gertrude Himmelfarb, an active scholar beginning in the 1950s who taught from 1965 to 1978 at Brooklyn College and at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York from 1978 until her retirement in 1988, wrote over ten books on intellectual developments in England in the nineteenth century. Her first book, Lord Acton: A Study in Conscience and Politics (Routledge, 1952), was followed by Darwin and the Darwinian Revolution (Doubleday, 1959) and Victorian Minds (Knopf, 1968). Himmelfarb also wrote a major study of the liberal thinker John Stuart Mill, On Liberty and Liberalism: The Case of John Stuart Mill (Knopf, 1974); edited volumes of works by Mill and Thomas Malthus; and analyzed Victorian attitudes in such books as The Idea of Poverty: England in the Early Industrial Age (Knopf, 1984), Marriage and Morals Among the Victorians: Essays (Knopf, 1986), Poverty and Compassion: The Moral Imagination of the Late Victorians (Knopf, 1991), and The Moral Imagination: From Edmund Burke to Lionel Trilling (Ivan R. Dee Press, 2006). Increasingly unhappy with new trends in historiography, Himmelfarb, evaluated them in The New History and the Old (Harvard University Press, 1987). Like her husband, neoconservative Irving Kristol, Himmelfarb, who died in 2019, became a social critic upset with current values. She wrote On Looking into the Abyss: Untimely Thoughts on Culture and Society (Knopf, 1984); The De-Moralization of Society: From Victorian Virtues to Modern Values (Knopf, 1995); and One Nation, Two Cultures (Knopf, 1999), all of which call for return to such Enlightenment values and Victorian virtues as shame, responsibility, and self-reliance. Himmelfarb also explored Jewish issues in two books: The Jewish Odyssey of George Eliot (Encounter Books, 2009) and The People of the Book: Philosemitism in England from Cromwell to Churchill (Encounter Books, 2011).  

Adrienne Koch, who served as professor at the University of California at Berkeley and at the University of Maryland and died in 1971, also was a prominent intellectual historian. She wrote many books on the American Enlightenment, including Power, Morals, and the Founding Fathers: Essays on the Interpretation of the American Enlightenment (Cornell University Press, 1961) and The American Enlightenment: The Shaping of the American Experiment (Braziller, 1971), and on the ideologies of the Founding Fathers, including The Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson (Columbia University Press, 1943) and Jefferson and Madison: The Great Collaboration (Oxford University Press, 1950). She also published editions of the writings of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and John Quincy Adams.

Pauline Maier has worked primarily as a political historian. A professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who died in 2013, she authored From Resistance to Revolution: Colonial Radicals and the Development of American Opposition to Britain, 1765–1776 (Knopf, 1972); The Old Revolutionaries: Political Lives in the Age of Samuel Adams (Knopf, 1980); American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence (Knopf, 1997); and Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution (Simon and Schuster, 2010).

Many Jewish women who are historians of Europe have added cultural concerns to their concerns with intellectual history. Jan Goldstein at the University of Chicago has worked in intellectual history, writing Console and Classify: The French Psychiatric Profession in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge University Press, 1987) and The Post-Revolutionary Self: Politics and Psyche in France, 1750–1850 (Harvard University Press, 2005), and editing Foucault and the Writing of History (Blackwell, 1994). Leora Auslander, also of the University of Chicago, focuses on material culture. She has published Taste and Power: Furnishing Modern France (University of California Press, 1996) and Cultural Revolutions: The Politics of Everyday Life in Britain, North America, and France (Oxford University Press, 2009). Mary Gluck of Brown University is an intellectual and cultural historian who has published George Lukács and His Generation (Harvard University Press, 1985), Popular Bohemia: Modernism and Urban Culture in Nineteenth-Century Paris (Harvard University Press, 2005), and The Invisible Jewish Budapest: Metropolitan Culture at the Fin-de-Siècle (University of Wisconsin Press, 2016). In medieval history, Gabrielle Spiegel of Johns Hopkins University has worked on the creation of French vernacular historiography in the twelfth century, and Brigitte Bedos-Rezak of New York University has authored books on how medieval seals illustrate the social and cultural worlds of eleventh- and twelfth-century France.

Jewish History

Despite the fact that Jewish women have placed themselves on the leading edge of much of historical scholarship in the past decades, most of them have not chosen to deal with Jews. Natalie Zemon Davis, however, after a long career dealing with French men and women, is an exception, exploring the life of a German Jewish woman in Women on the Margins: Three Seventeenth-Century Lives (Harvard University Press, 1995). Davis included Glikl bas Judah Leib, generally known as Glückel of Hameln, a prosperous Jewish woman who spent most of her life in Hamburg and Metz, the wife of Jewish merchants and herself a merchant, who wrote a long autobiography to console herself after the death of her first husband. Davis, who mastered the difficult Yiddish text, has placed Glückel squarely within her seventeenth-century milieu, astutely describing the sources of her piety and inner religious life. Davis well understands how Glückel viewed the hostile Christian world around her. Despite the fact that she was on the margins of the dominant society, both as a Jew and as a woman, Glückel, and the Jews generally, created a Jewish world that sustained them and in turn marginalized the Christians.

Jewish women have also been prominent in developing the field of modern Jewish history, many of them in social history and women’s history in Europe and America. Among the earliest women to pursue careers as professional Jewish historians were Naomi W. CohenLucy S. Dawidowicz, and Nora Levin. Cohen, born in 1927, studied Jewish history with Salo Baron at Columbia University in the late 1940s, obtaining her Ph.D. there in 1955 in American and Jewish history. The author of nine books, Cohen concerned herself with traditional historiographic concerns: Jewish politics, Jewish/non-Jewish relations, and the status of Jews in American society. Her first book, A Dual Heritage: The Public Career of Oscar S. Strauss (Jewish Publication Society, 1969), was a study of the first Jew to hold a prominent position in the American government. Cohen, who taught at Hunter College from 1962 until her retirement in 1996, also wrote monographs on the American Jewish Committee (Not Free to Desist: The American Jewish Committee, 1906–1966, Jewish Publication Society, 1972); on American Jews and Zionism (American Jews and the Zionist Idea, Ktav, 1975, and The Americanization of Zionism, 1897–1948, Brandeis University Press, 2003); on the American response to the riots in Palestine in 1929–1930 (The Year After the Riots: American Responses to the Palestine Crisis of 1929–1930, Wayne State University Press, 1988); and on the Jewish struggle for religious equality (Jews in Christian America, Oxford University Press, 1992). In addition, she published Encounter with Emancipation: The German Jews in the United States, 1830–1914 (Jewish Publication Society, 1984), Jacob H. Schiff: A Study in American Jewish Leadership (Brandeis University Press, 1999), and What the Rabbis Said: The Public Discourse of Nineteenth-Century American Rabbis (New York University Press, 2008). Cohen died in 2018.

Lucy Dawidowicz worked on Eastern European Jews and on the Holocaust. Born in 1915 and educated at Hunter College and Columbia, she spent a year as a fellow in Jewish history at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Vilna in 1938–1939, a year she movingly describes in her memoir From That Time and Place (Norton, 1989). Like most women of her generation, she did not pursue a straightforward academic career. Instead, during World War II, she worked for YIVO in New York as Max Weinreich’s scholarly assistant, returning to Columbia at the end of the war to study Jewish history with Salo Baron and then working for the Joint Distribution Committee with Jewish Holocaust survivors in Europe. While there, she became involved in 1946–1947 in arranging for the transfer of YIVO’s Vilna library, which had been captured by the Germans but was then in the possession of the American army, to YIVO in New York.

After many years as a research analyst at the American Jewish Committee, Dawidowicz assumed an academic career path only in the late 1960s, when she began to publish books and teach at Yeshiva University. Her first scholarly book was The Golden Tradition: Jewish Life and Thought in Eastern Europe (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1967), a collection of translated documents depicting the literary, religious, and political history of Eastern European Jewry in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Most of Dawidowicz’s scholarship was devoted to the Holocaust. In 1975, she published The War Against the Jews, 1933–1945 (Holt, Rinehart and Winston), which dealt both with the Nazi policy of annihilation and the Jewish response to the Nazis. A year later, she published a collection of documents on the Holocaust, A Holocaust Reader (Behrmann House), and in 1981, The Holocaust and the Historians (Harvard University Press), an attempt to understand how different historians, including those in Germany and those who played down its significance, have treated the Holocaust. Dawidowicz also published on American Jewry (On Equal Terms: Jews in America, 1881–1981, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1982) and several collections of essays on various issues in modern Jewish life.  She died in 1990.

Like Dawidowicz, Nora Levin did not pursue a standard academic career path. Born in 1916 and trained in library science, she worked as a librarian and a high school teacher before she began to write about the Jews of Eastern Europe and the Holocaust. The author of The Holocaust: The Destruction of European Jewry, 1933–1945 (Crowell, 1968), While Messiah Tarried: Jewish Socialist Movements, 1871–1917 (Schocken, 1977), and The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917: Paradox of Survival (New York University Press, 1989), she taught at Gratz College from 1970 until her death in 1989.

As modern Jewish history grew as a field in the 1970s, women came to play an increasingly prominent role within its ranks, publishing pathbreaking works in Jewish social history, including Jewish women’s history, and occupying prominent positions at leading American universities. Many of these women were trained in Jewish history at Columbia University or Brandeis, while others received their original training in related fields of history but chose to work primarily on Jewish life in modern Europe or America.

The career of Paula Hyman most typifies this new generation of Jewish historians. Born in 1946 in Boston, Hyman was educated at Radcliffe and Columbia, receiving her Ph.D. in 1975. She taught at Columbia University (1974–1981), the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (1981–1986), where she also served as dean of the Seminary College of Jewish Studies, and at Yale University from 1986 until her untimely death in 2011. A social historian of great distinction, Hyman wrote three important books on the Jews in France: From Dreyfus to Vichy: The Remaking of French Jewry, 1906–1939 (Columbia University Press, 1979), a study of how the immigration of Eastern European Jews to France in the early twentieth century transformed the Jewish community there; The Emancipation of the Jews of Alsace: Acculturation and Tradition in the Nineteenth Century (Yale University Press, 1991), a work that revealed both the persistence of traditional Jewish economic, social, and religious behavior patterns in Eastern France, despite early legal emancipation, and demonstrated how the economic and social forces of modernity ultimately undercut Jewish traditionalism in the late nineteenth century; and The Jews of Modern France (University of California Press, 1998), a synthetic book on the history of the Jews in France from the eighteenth century to the present. An activist in the women’s movement since the 1960s, Hyman also devoted much scholarly attention to Jewish women, co-authoring with Charlotte Baum and Sonya Michel The Jewish Woman in America (Dial Press, 1976), writing many articles, and also publishing Gender and Assimilation in Modern Jewish History: The Roles and Representation of Women (University of Washington Press, 1995), a study of the role of gender in Jewish assimilation in Western Europe, Eastern Europe, and the United States. She also edited, helped translate, and wrote an introduction to the English translation of Puah Rakovsky’s memoirs, My Life as a Radical Jewish Woman (Indiana University Press, 2002), which provides insight into the experiences of Jewish women in Zionist and Socialist circles in Poland in the first decades of the twentieth century. In 1997, Hyman collaborated with Deborah Dash Moore as co-editor of Jewish Women in America: A Historical Encyclopedia, a two-volume social history of American Jewish women. She later went on to co-edit, with Dalia Ofer, Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia, an extensive work that captures the feats and achievements as well as the cultural, geographic, and religious diversity of Jewish women, from Biblical times to the present. In all of her books and articles, Hyman displayed a sensitivity to the unique situation of Jewish women and the role of gender in modern Jewish history.

Within the field of European Jewish history, other Jewish women have also made significant contributions. Marion Kaplan, for example, who has served as professor at Queens College and at New York University, is the leading historian of German Jewish women. She is the author of The Jewish Feminist Movement in Germany: The Campaigns of the Jüdischer Frauenbund, 1904–1938 (Greenwood Press, 1979) and The Making of the Jewish Middle Class: Women, Family, and Identity in Imperial Germany (Oxford University Press, 1991), which showed the crucial role played by women in the development of the bourgeois German Jewish family, a family that facilitated Jewish acculturation to the social mores of the gentile middle classes and also served as the vehicle through which Jews maintained Jewish religious traditions, Jewish social life, and a sense of Jewish ethnic solidarity in Germany. Indeed, after Kaplan’s work, no serious study of Jewish assimilation anywhere could be made without taking gender issues into account. Kaplan has also written extensively on the Holocaust years. In 1998 she published Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany (Oxford University Press), a sensitive analysis of how Nazi persecution affected Jews, Jewish women, and the Jewish family in the 1930s and 1940s. Using published and unpublished memoirs, as she has done in much of her work, Kaplan revealed the gendered nature of Jewish response to the Nazis. She has also published Dominican Haven: The Jewish Refugee Settlement in Sosúa (Museum of Jewish Heritage, 2008) and Hitler’s Jewish Refugees: Hope and Anxiety in Portugal (Yale University Press, 2020). Kaplan has edited many books on German Jews and on women, including (with Deborah Dash Moore), Gender and Jewish History (Indiana University Press, 2011). Atina Grossmann, who along with Kaplan edited When Biology Becomes Destiny, a book on women in Weimar and Nazi Germany, has also made a major contribution to our understanding of Jewish Holocaust survivors. In Jews, Germans, and Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany (Princeton University Press, 2007), Grossmann shows how Jewish survivors created families and reconstructed their identities while they waited to emigrate to Palestine or America. She also explores how these Jews interacted with Germans and competed with them for the favor of the occupying Allied forces.

Other important historians of European Jewry in the modern period include Frances Malino (Wellesley College, retired), the author of The Sephardic Jews of Bordeaux: Assimilation and Emancipation in Revolutionary and Napoleonic France (University of Alabama Press, 1978) and A Jew in the French Revolution: The Life of Zalkind Hourwitz (Blackwell, 1996), and Harriet Freidenreich (Temple University, retired), who has written on the Jews of Yugoslavia in the interwar period (The Jews of Yugoslavia: A Quest for Community, Jewish Publication Society, 1979), the Jews of Vienna (Jewish Politics in Vienna, 1918–1938, Indiana University Press, 1991), and Female, Jewish, and Educated: The Lives of Central European University Women (Indiana University Press, 2002). Marsha Rozenblit, professor at the University of Maryland, has written on Jewish assimilation in late Habsburg Vienna (The Jews of Vienna, 1867–1918: Assimilation and Identity [State University of New York Press, 1983]), and on the nature of Jewish identity in a multinational state (Reconstructing a National Identity: The Jews of Habsburg Austria during World War I [Oxford University Press, 2001]). Vicki Caron, who taught for many years at Cornell University before her retirement, has written Between France and Germany: The Jews of Alsace-Lorraine, 1871–1918 (Stanford University Press, 1988) and Uneasy Asylum: France and the Jewish Refugee Crisis, 1933–1942 (Stanford University Press, 1999). Deborah Hertz, a professor at the University of California, San Diego, has published Jewish High Society in Old Regime Berlin (Yale University Press, 1988) and How Jews Became German: The History of Conversion and Assimilation in Berlin (Yale University Press, 2007). Much of Hertz’ work deals with the dilemmas of women in the early nineteenth century. Also concerned with those dilemmas in Shulamit Magnus, a professor at Oberlin College. Her first book was a study of the Jews in Cologne, Jewish Emancipation in a German City, Cologne, 1798-1871 (Stanford University Press, 1997), but then she devoted her scholarly attention to Pauline Wengeroff, who experienced the pressures of modernizing in nineteenth-century Russia. Magnus published Wengeroff’s memoirs (Memoirs of a Grandmother: Scenes from the Cultural History of the Jews of Russia in the Nineteenth Century [2 volumes, Stanford University Press, 2010-2014], with an introduction and commentary, and a biography of Wengeroff: A Woman’s Life: Pauline Wengeroff and Memoirs of a Grandmother (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2016).

Most of the generation of Jewish historians who received their Ph.D.s in the 1970s or early 1980s were trained at Columbia or Brandeis, but younger European Jewish historians attended a wider range of institutions. Elissa Bemporad, a native of Modena, Italy, who received her Ph.D. at Stanford University, teaches at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. A specialist in Soviet Jewish history, she has written Becoming Soviet Jews: The Bolshevik Experiment in Minsk (Indiana University Press, 2013) and Legacy of Blood: Jews, Pogroms, and Ritual Murder in the Land of the Soviets (Oxford University Press, 2019). Lisa Moses Leff, a specialist in French Jewish history, obtained her Ph.D. at the University of Chicago and taught at American University before becoming the director of the Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. She has published Sacred Bonds of Solidarity: The Rise of Jewish Internationalism in Nineteenth-Century France (Stanford University Press, 2006) and The Archive Thief: The Man Who Salvaged French Jewish History in the Wake of the Holocaust (Oxford University Press, 2015). Similarly, Maud Mandel, who also specializes in French Jewish history, studied at the University of Michigan, taught at Brown University, and is now the president of Williams College. She is the author of In the Aftermath of Genocide: Armenians and Jews in Twentieth Century France (Duke University Press, 2003) and Muslims and Jews in France: History of a Conflict (Princeton University Press, 2014).

Fewer Jewish women study medieval and early modern Jewish history, but women in this field are quite prominent. Elisheva Carlebach, professor at Columbia University, has written The Pursuit of Heresy: Rabbi Moses Hagiz and the Sabbatean Controversies (Columbia University Press, 1990), Divided Souls: Converts from Judaism in Germany, 1500–1750 (Yale University Press, 2001), and Palaces of Time: Jewish Calendar and Culture in Early Modern Europe (Harvard University Press, 2011). Miriam Bodian, who specializes in Descendants of the Jews who lived in Spain and Portugal before the explusion of 1492; primarily Jews of N. Africa, Italy, the Middle East and the Balkans.Sephardi Jews, both in Spain during the Inquisition and in Amsterdam, teaches at the University of Texas, Austin. She has authored Hebrews of the Portuguese Nation: Conversos and Community in Early Modern Amsterdam (Indiana University Press, 1997) and Dying in the Law of Moses: Crypto-Jewish Martyrdom in the Iberian World (Indiana University Press, 2011). Jane Gerber, who taught for many years at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York before her retirement, also specialized in Sephardi history. She is the author of Jewish Society in Fez, 1450-1700: Studies in Communal and Economic Life (Brill, 1980), The Jews of Spain: A History of the Sephardic Experience (Free Press, 1992), and Cities of Splendour in the Shaping of Sephardi History (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2020). Talya Fishman, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, is the author of Shaking the Pillars of Exile: “Voice of a Fool,” an Early Modern Jewish Critique of Rabbinic Culture (Stanford University Press, 1997), Becoming the People of the Talmud: Oral Torah as Written Tradition in Medieval Jewish Cultures (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011), and Regional Identities and Cultures of Medieval Jews (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2018). Marina Rustow, a specialist in the Cairo Genizah, the storehouse of medieval Jewish documents discovered in Cairo in the 1890s that has been an extraordinary source for medieval Jewish history in the Mediterranean, teaches at Princeton University. She is the author of Heresy and the Politics of Community: The Jews of the Fatamid Caliphate (Cornell University Press, 2008), a study of the interdependence and cooperation of Rabbanites and Karaites in the Jewish community and an exploration of the nature of rabbinic authority itself, and Lost Archive: Traces of a Caliphate in a Cairo Synagogue (Princeton, 2020).

Within American Jewish history, Jewish women have been equally prominent since the 1970s. Deborah Dash Moore, for example, professor at Vassar College and, since 2005, at the University of Michigan, has written such major works as At Home in America: Second Generation New York Jews (Columbia University Press, 1981), a study of the process by which the children of Eastern European Jewish immigrants Americanized and yet still maintained a strong Jewish ethnic identity in New York in the 1920s and 1930s; B’nai B’rith and the Challenge of Ethnic Leadership (State University of New York Press, 1981); To the Golden Cities: Pursuing the American Jewish Dream in Miami and L.A. (Free Press, 1994); and GI Jews: How World War II Changed a Generation (Harvard University Press, 2004), an analysis of how Jewish soldiers experienced their American, Jewish, and masculine identities as soldiers in the American army during the Second World War. She has also edited many books, including with Marion Kaplan, Gender and Jewish History (Indiana University Press, 2011); with Paula Hyman, Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia (Routledge, 1997); with Ilan Troen, Divergent Jewish Cultures: Israel and America (Yale University Press, 2001); and City of Promises: A History of the Jews of New York (New York University Press, 2012).

Jenna Weissman Joselit, a professor at George Washington University, is likewise the author of several important books in American Jewish social history, beginning with Our Gang: Jewish Crime and the New York Jewish Community, 1900–1940 (Indiana University Press, 1983), a study of how both Jewish criminal activity and the response of the organized Jewish community to Jewish crime reflected the successful Americanization of the Eastern European immigrants in the early twentieth century. Joselit has also written a study of modern Orthodoxy, New York’s Jewish Jews: The Orthodox Community in the Interwar Years (Indiana University Press, 1990), and The Wonders of America: Reinventing Jewish Culture 1880–1950 (Hill and Wang, 1994). In addition to her books in American Jewish history, Joselit has written on American history, exploring American religion in Set in Stone: America’s Embrace of the Ten Commandments (Oxford University Press, 2017) and the role of clothing in American history in A Perfect Fit: Clothes, Character, and the Promise of America (Metropolitan Books, 2001).

Deborah Lipstadt, a professor at Emory University, has focused on the reception of the Holocaust in America in two books: Beyond Belief: The American Press and the Coming of the Holocaust, 1933–1945 (Free Press, 1986) and Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory (Free Press, 1993). This work also catapulted her to fame, when David Irving, whom she accused in the book of being a Holocaust denier, sued her and her British publisher for libel. Since the British courts, unlike their American counterparts, place the onus for a libel case on the writer rather than the subject (in the United States the subject has to prove that the reference to him/her is false; in Britain, the writer must show that what he/she wrote is unequivocally true), Lipstadt would have to prove that Irving was lying—or conversely, demonstrate that the “events” he claimed never happened had actually occurred. A court case about libel ultimately served to put the truth of the Holocaust on trial. When she won the case, Lipstadt became a highly regarded public figure in the Jewish world. She has written History on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving (Ecco, 2005) about her ordeal. Lipstadt has also written The Eichmann Trial (Schocken Books, 2011) and Holocaust: An American Understanding (Rutgers University Press, 2016).

Among historians of American Jewish life, Hasia Diner, a professor at New York University, has simultaneously made major contributions to the fields of immigrant history, women’s history, and Jewish history. Her first book, In the Almost Promised Land: American Jews and Blacks, 1915–1935 (Greenwood Press, 1977), was a study of how the Yiddish press viewed the struggle for civil rights of American Blacks in the early twentieth century. She then went on to write a pathbreaking study of Irish women in the United States, Erin’s Daughters in America: Irish Immigrant Women in the Nineteenth Century (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983). Returning to Jewish history, Diner provided a completely new understanding of the nineteenth-century Jewish immigrants to America from German-speaking Central Europe in A Time for Gathering: The Second Migration, 1820–1880 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992). Here, Diner argued that although these Jews acculturated and Americanized, they also forged new forms of Jewish identity as a means of preserving Jewish community in America. Diner went on to do an important comparative study of how different American immigrant groups used food to negotiate both Americanization and the preservation of ethnic community: Hungering for America: Italian, Irish, and Jewish Foodways in the Age of Migration (Harvard University Press, 2001). She has also written an evocative book about the pre-eminent Jewish immigrant neighborhood, Lower East Side Memories: A Jewish Place in America (Princeton University Press, 2000); and two synthetic works, one (with Beryl Benderly) on Jewish women, Her Works Praise Her: A History of Jewish Women in America from Colonial Times to the Present (Basic Books, 2002), and the other an excellent one-volume history of the American Jewish community, The Jews of the United States, 1654 to 2000 (University of California Press, 2004).  She has also studied how American Jews understood the Holocaust in the years immediately after World War II. In We Remember with Reverence and Love: American Jews and Myth of Silence after the Holocaust, 1945-1962 (New York University Press, 2009), Diner overturned the conventional wisdom that American Jews did not concern themselves much with the Holocaust until the late 1960s. Indeed, she documented extensive Jewish activism about the Holocaust in the decades before. She has also published a major study of Jewish peddlers, Roads Taken: The Great Jewish Migrations to the New World and the Peddlers Who Forged the Way (Yale University Press, 2015), as well as a biography of one such peddler, Julius Rosenwald, who became the wealthy owner of Sears, Roebuck and a major philanthropist to Jewish and African-American causes: Julius Rosenwald: Repairing the World (Yale University Press, 2017).

Other historians of Jewish women in America include Susan Glenn, Daughters of the Shtetl: Life and Labor in the Immigrant Community (Cornell University Press, 1990); Sydney Stahl Weinberg, The World of Our Mothers: The Lives of Jewish Immigrant Women (University of North Carolina Press, 1988); and Judith E. Smith, Family Lives: A History of Italian and Jewish Immigrant Lives in Providence 1900–1940 (State University of New York Press, 1985).  Glenn, a professor at the University of Washington, has gone on to deal with women and the theater in Female Spectacle: The Theatrical Roots of Modern Feminism (Harvard University Press, 2000), and Smith, a professor at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, has addressed issues in American cultural history in Visions of Belonging: Family Stories, Popular Culture, and Postwar Democracy, 1940-1960 (Columbia University Press, 2004) and Becoming Belafonte: Black Artist, Public Radical (University of Texas Press, 2014). Likewise, Melissa Klapper of Rowan University has written two books on Jewish women: Jewish Girls Coming of Age in America, 1860-1920 (New York University Press, 2005) and Ballots, Babies, and Banners of Peace: American Jewish Women’s Activism, 1890-1940 (New York University Press, 2013), as well as two books in American history more generally, Small Strangers: The Experience of Immigrant Children in America, 1880-1925) (Ivan R. Dee, 2007) and Ballet Class: An American History (Oxford University Press, 2020).

Many other American Jewish historians have focused exclusively on the experience of Jews in general. Beth Wenger, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, has written New York Jews and the Great Depression (Yale University Press, 1996) and History Lessons: The Creation of American Jewish Heritage (Princeton University Press, 2010). Rebecca Kobrin, a professor at Columbia University, has published Jewish Bialystok and Its Diaspora (Indiana University Press, 2010), a transnational study of the interconnection of Jews from Bialystok in North and South America, and two edited books on the relationship of Jews to capitalism. Lila Corwin Berman, who teaches at Temple University, has published Speaking of Jews: Rabbis, Intellectuals, and the Creation of an American Public Identity (University of California Press, 2008), Metropolitan Jews: Politics, Race, and Religion in Postwar Detroit (University of Chicago Press, 2015), and The American Jewish Philanthropic Complex: The History of a Multibillion-Dollar Institution (Princeton University Press, 2020). Pamela Nadell, a professor at American University, has focused on Jewish women. She is the author of Women Who Would Be Rabbis: A History of Women’s Ordination, 1889-1985 (Beacon, 1998), Women and American Judaism: Historical Perspectives (University Press of New England, 2001), and America’s Jewish Women: A History from Colonial Times to Today (Norton, 2020).

Jewish women, uniquely sensitive to the position of minority groups, have thus been in the forefront of new developments within academic history in social history, women’s history, Jewish history, and minority group history generally. Products of a changing America, they have made a major contribution to many fields of historical inquiry.

Have an update or correction? Let us know

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Rozenblit, Marsha L.. "Historians in the United States." Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 23 June 2021. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on December 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/historians-in-united-states>.