Students of the Technical University of Braunschweig, under the tutelage of Professor Daniel Ute, have spent a semester studying Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition, (released in German, 2015) and have produced a companion guide that explores the text by chapter. With support from the Gerda Henkel Foundation, the project has been posted as an online publication to L.I.S.A., the Foundation's science web portal and can be found here.
WATCH >> David Nirenberg explains his research in "Mangeur d'aubergines!"
David Nirenberg explains his work in an audio slideshow for the French web site, histoires-courtes.fr.
"...even if something's a vegetable like the eggplant, it can become a complex marker of cultural difference."
WATCH >> Harper Lecture with David Nirenberg: Religion and Violence
Recorded on April 23, 2015 in Washington, DC.
The prominent place of religion in today’s geopolitics raises many questions: Does religion reduce violence or cause it? Are some religions more peaceful than others? How should we understand the role of religion in contemporary conflicts? In this lecture, David Nirenberg focuses on how the Qur’an, Torah, and New Testament have been read at different moments in history—including our own—in order to explore religion’s place in the politics of conflict and community.
https://youtu.be/wPYzt6RkYoI?list=PLuGHfVNSITJe_6p9QbKSw1YyqXCg3qPe_
WATCH >> C-SPAN Book Discussion at the 2013 Chicago Tribune Printers Row Lit Fest in Chicago, Illinois.
David Nirenberg talked about his book, Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition.
This event took place in the University Center’s Lake Room at the 2013 Chicago Tribune Printers Row Lit Fest in Chicago, Illinois.
http://www.c-span.org/video/?313185-8/book-discussion-antijudaism
David Nirenberg Receives Prestigious Ralph Waldo Emerson Award
By Jann Ingmire
OCTOBER 13, 2014
The Phi Beta Kappa Society has announced that David Nirenberg, dean of the Social Sciences Division, will receive the 2014 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award for his book, Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition. Nirenberg is the Deborah R. and Edgar D. Jannotta Professor of Medieval History and Social Thought.
The Phi Beta Kappa society describes the Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, which was established in 1960, as honoring scholarly studies that contribute significantly to interpretations of the intellectual and cultural condition of humanity in the fields of history, philosophy and religion.
“I was very surprised to be on the short list for this award and I was even more surprised to win it,” Nirenberg said. “I think the impact of the book is to show us that the ways in which we think about the world are often shaped by how we have learned to think about Judaism. So many of our most important critical categories in so many different areas of culture—religion, philosophy, economics, poetry and art, even mathematics and physics—have had a long history of learning to distinguish between good and bad by thinking about Judaism.”
One member of the panel that chose Nirenberg’s book wrote, “Anti-Judaism is a depressing book in what it reveals, but it is genuinely elevating in its high moral purpose, in the power of scholarship, and in its marshaling of rhetorical and linguistic resources in services of its lambent argument.”
“I wrote the book because I felt that it is dangerous not to be aware of how history shapes how we can perceive the world,” Nirenberg said.
Dean Nirenberg has a new book, “Neighboring Faiths: Islam, Christianity and Judaism in the Middle Ages and Today,” published this month by the University of Chicago Press. “The new book is much less ‘depressing’ in that it is all about how each of these three religions took shape by looking and thinking about the others,” Nirenberg said. “This ‘co-production’ of religious cultures is an ongoing process that’s really dynamic, whether for good or ill.”
The Phi Beta Kappa Society will present the Ralph Waldo Emerson Award and a $10,000 prize to Nirenberg at a dinner at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. in December. Also being honored that evening will be authors receiving the Christian Gauss Award and the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science.
- See more at: http://news.uchicago.edu/article/2014/10/13/david-nirenberg-receives-prestigious-2014-phi-beta-kappa-book-award#sthash.rlF6E7aI.dpuf