Published: Feb. 26, 2016
Naomi Seidman

The Program in Jewish Studies is pleased to welcome Naomi Seidman, Koret Professor of Jewish Culture at the Graduate Theological Union, as the 2016 Sondra and Howard Bender Visiting Scholar. Seidman's visit was recently highlighted in the . Read the full article below.

Learn more about Seidman's visit

Visiting scholar to explore 'Tevye's Dream,' marriage

By Clint Talbott

Published inColorado Arts & Sciences Magazine, Feburary 25, 2016. Clickfor a link to the original article.

Scholar and translatorwill serve as the2016 Sondra and Howard Bender Visiting Scholarat the «Ƶ.Naomi Sheindel Seidman

Seidman will be in residence March 9-11 and will present a public lecture titled “Tevye’s Dream, Or How Traditional Marriage Haunts Modern Romance,” onThursday, March 10 at 7 p.m.in Old Main Theater on campus.

This event is free and open to the public.RSVPs are appreciated and can be made via email toCUJewishStudies@colorado.edu.

Seidman is Koret Professor of Jewish Culture at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Her scholarship focuses on contemporary Jewish thought, gender and sexuality, and modern Jewish literature and literary theory.

In her public lecture at CU-«Ƶ, Seidman will argue that the usual reading of Sholem Aleichem’s Tevye stories as well as the musical based on them,Fiddler on the Roof,as a staging of the triumph of modern romance over traditional marriage fails to take account of Tevye’s dream, which demonstrates the haunting of Jewish modernity by the remembered and invented traditional past.

In addition to her public lecture, Seidman will present a graduate student and faculty colloquium and serve as a guest lecturer in a Jewish Studies course.

Seidman received a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of California Berkeley in 1995 and was the former director of the Richard S. Dinner Center for Jewish Studies at the Graduate Theological Union, where she has taught since 1995.

Her first book,A Marriage Made in Heaven: The Sexual Politics of Hebrew and Yiddish,examinesthe ways that Hebrew, the Holy Tongue and Yiddish, the vernacular language of Ashkenazic Jews, came to represent the masculine and feminine faces, respectively, of Ashkenazic Jewish culture.

Her second book,Faithful Renderings: Jewish-Christian Difference and the Politics of Translation(University of Chicago Press,2006), readstranslation history through the lens of Jewish-Christian difference and, conversely, views Jewish-Christian difference as an effect of translation.

Her third book,The Marriage Plot, Or, How Jews Fell in Love with Love,and with Literature, is forthcoming from Stanford University Press this spring.

Seidman’s visit celebrates theSondra and Howard Bender Visiting Scholars Endowed Fund, honoring the lives of Howard and Sondra Bender, parents of four children and eleven grandchildren, including CU graduate Eileen Greenberg, and grandchildren CU graduates Joshua (and spouse Adriane), Rachael and Daniel Greenberg.

Past visiting Bender scholars include Guggenheim Fellow Sarah Stein, post-Holocaust American Judaism scholar Shaul Magid and renowned Holocaust scholar Deborah Lipstadt.

Naomi Seidman’s visit is presented by the «Ƶ’sProgram in Jewish Studies, with generous support from the Bender Foundation and the family of Eileen and Richard Greenberg.

For more information about this event, please visitColorado.edu/JewishStudiesor call 303.492.7143.