Samuel Kessler
Title VIII Short-term East European Studies Scholar
Professional Affiliation
Ph.D. Candidate, Religious Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Expert Bio
Samuel J. Kessler received his BA from New York University and MA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is currently a doctoral candidate and teaching fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at UNC Chapel Hill. His scholarship focuses primarily on nineteenth-century responses to Enlightenment and the history of science. He also works on topics in postmodern theory (Foucault) and twentieth-century literature (Roth, Malamud, Durrell). His dissertation, entitled 鈥淭he Scientific Rabbinics of Adolf Jellinek: Tradition and Enlightenment in Nineteenth Century Austro-German Jewry,鈥 examines the life and works of Adolf Jellinek, chief rabbi of Vienna from 1857 to 1893. It argues that Jellinek鈥檚 embrace of scientific methods on behalf of Jewish tradition complicates the narrative of antagonism and divergence that often characterizes histories of religion and science.
乐鱼 体育 Project
"The Social and Intellectual Environment of Jews in Bohemia and Moravia in the First Half of the 19th Century"
Project Summary
Using the life of Adolf Jellinek鈥攁 prominent nineteenth-century rabbi born in Moravia鈥攁s its central case study, my dissertation aims to tell a new story about the interplay of European modernity with Jewish religious thought and practice. I argue that Jellinek鈥檚 works offer a distinct and provocative example of the rabbinical embrace of non-Jewish methods of thinking and writing (such as are found in the nineteenth-century disciplines of biblical criticism, anthropology, and philology鈥攅ach of which Jellinek studied and wrote in) that all the while attempted to infuse those methods with a Jewish vocabulary and memory. I explore how Adolf Jellinek sought through his life and work to redefine rabbinic languages, themes, and subjects so that they might function as a lens through which acculturating and urbanizing Jews could engage with the newest non-Jewish knowledge while retaining both Jewish difference and a strong link to pre-modern Jewish habits and practices.
Major Publications
鈥淔oucault and the Holocaust: Epistemic Shift, Liminality, and the Death Camps,鈥 Dapim 鈥 Studies on the Holocaust 28, no. 3 (Nov. 2014).
鈥淩eligion and the Public University,鈥 Philosophy and Public Policy Quarterly 31, no. 1 (Spring 2013), 19-27.
"Systematization, Theology, and the Baroque Wunderkammern: Seeing Nature After Linnaeus,鈥 Heythrop Journal. (In press [published online June 4, 2013].)
Insight & Analysis by Samuel Kessler
- Past event
- History
Religion and the Encounter with Modernity: What Can We Learn from Jewish Urbanization?
