AAASS panel on Kant and eighteenth-century Russia
Helena Tolstoy
tolstoy at MSCC.HUJI.AC.IL
Mon Jan 16 07:17:52 UTC 2006
Save Slavic Studies in Israel!
Dear Colleagues and Friends!
I am Helen Tolstoy, a literary scholar teaching Russian literature at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem. As many others in Israel, I am deeply
concerned about the fate of the Universitys Slavic scholars.
There are about 1.200.000 Israelis who came from the former Soviet Union,
most of them in the 1990s. Their mother tongue is Russian. They constitute
about one-fifth of the population of Israel. As a group they are highly
educated (60% with academic degrees) and envision higher education for their
children.
There are about 60 chairs of Russian studies in the US and 24 in Italy where
there are no Russian-speaking population whereas in Israel with over one
million Russian native speakers there is but one small department of Russian
studies at the Hebrew University founded in the 1970s by a group of
brilliant émigré Jewish-Russian scholars. For twenty years it was denied
any opportunity of growth. And, according to some pronouncements on the part
of the authorities, now it is doomed.
For 30 years it has been presenting Russian classic literature to the
Israeli students who have no command of Russian. Secondly, it has been
instructing bilingual new repatriant students in Russian literature and
culture as part of their B.A., M.A., or post-graduate programs, thus
performing an important social role of encouraging second- generation
repatriant social mobility and also creating new Israeli elite who would
have roots in two cultures.
Our faculty is composed of several highly active first-rate scholars who
enjoy international fame. They are invited to teach at American and European
universities and take part in international projects. Among them are
Professors Roman Timenchik, Moshe Taube, Michael Weisskopf, Vladimir Hazan,
Helen Tolstoy.
In recent years our Russian department established itself as an important
world center of Russian studies. Here are the facts: the journal, Slavica
Hierosolymitana (1978-1988), became one of the best academic periodicals in
the world which united Israeli, major international Slavists, and, in
defiance of the still working prohibitions, prominent Soviet scholars. The
journal demonstrated a taste for innovation and great intellectual daring.
Its contributors are now the cream of international Slavic studies.
Slavica was followed by a series of collections of articles Jews and
Slavs (Vol. 16 is to appear soon). A number of our scholars launched an
international Russian-language journal Solnechnoe Spletenie (1998-2004,
www.plexus.org.il) which is a unique combination of a highbrow academic
publication and an avant-garde literary project.
The international congresses organized by the department have established
Hebrew University among the leaders of European Slavic studies: April 2001.
Pilgrimage in Slavic Cultures 62 participants from 16 countries;
December 2002. Anti-Semitism and Filo-Semitism in Russian Culture 79
participants from 20 countries; May 2003. Russian Symbolism 38 scholars
from 6 countries; December 2004. The Russian Word in the Land of Israel
40 scholars from 12 countries; April 2005. Messianism in Slavic and Jewish
Cultures 80 scholars from 12 countries.
Israel is a unique place where Eastern European expertise meets Western
thinking. Israeli archives contain unique documents pertaining to the
cultural history of cosmopolitan Russian Jews, an extremely mobile group,
acting in Russia, Europe, Israel and the US.
To sum up: it would be a humanly devastating, socially insulting, and
completely senseless blow, to teachers, students and to world research in
humanities, if the University destroys its Russian studies unit.
I am turning to international Slavists for a clarification of the status and
rating of our scholars worldwide. Please help us!
All is needed is to send an e-mail with some words of support to our
President, to Chairman of the External Commission, with CC to me so I could
monitor the volume of your responses:
To: Professor Menachem Magidor
President, Hebrew University
[hupres at cc.huji.ac.il]
To: Professor John Gager,
Chairman of the External Commission for reform of HU
[gager at Princeton.EDU]
With hopes of support,
Dr. Helen Tolstoy,
Lecturer in Russian literature,
Russian Studies, Hebrew University.
Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem, Israel.
Tel. 972-2-6232852
e-mail address: tolstoy at mscc.huji.ac.il
-----Original Message-----
From: Slavic & East European Languages and Literature list
[mailto:SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU] On Behalf Of Amanda Ewington
Sent: 09 January 2006 07:23
To: SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU
Subject: [SEELANGS] AAASS panel on Kant and eighteenth-century Russia
Hello,
I am seeking a third panelist for a AAASS panel on Kant in
eighteenth-century Russia. The two papers we have deal with
aesthetics, but any topic related to Kant and Russia in the
eighteenth century will fit nicely. If you're interested, please get
in touch with me (off list!) with a working title, very short blurb,
and a current c.v.
The deadline for submission is this Friday, January 13, so the sooner
the better.
Thanks!
Amanda
____________________________________
Amanda Ewington, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Russian
Davidson College
Department of German and Russian
Box 6936
Davidson, NC 28035-6936
tel: (704)894-2397
fax: (704)894-2782
amewington at davidson.edu
http://www.davidson.edu/russian/index.htm
Courier:
209 Ridge Road
Davidson, NC 28036
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