Sasha Senderovich, Assistant Professor of Russian Studies and Jewish Studies, presented a paper on how contemporary Soviet-born American Jewish writers respond to the idea of "the Soviet Jew" that emerged in the West during the Cold War, at the annual conference of the (ASEEES) in Philadelpha in November.
He also participated in the annual convention of the Association for Jewish Studies (AJS) in Boston in December: in a roundtable discussion on Yiddish translation, where he spoke about his recently completed collaborative translation of Soviet Yiddish writer David Bergelson's novelÌý; and in a roundtable discussion on the pedagogy of including recent TV shows into the Jewish Studies classroom -- including the CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ course "Introduction to Jewish Culture."
Together with David Coons (a CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ undergraduate double-majoring in Jewish Studies and Studio Arts), in October heÌýÌýon the pedagogy of teaching Moyshe Kulbak's novelÌý; this book, which appears on the syllabus for his CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ course on the Russian-Jewish Experience and for which he authored the critical introduction and notes, wasÌý.ÌýHe will spend the Spring 2016 semester in residence at Harvard University's Center for Jewish Studies as a Starr Fellow in Judaica.