In Dialogue: Polish-Jewish Relations in the Pre-Modern Period

Thursday Oct 4, 2018 6:00pm
Broadside with cartoon showing a Jew, an Armenian, and people indicated by occupation mourning the death of Credit, Poland, seventeenth century. (Biblioteka Naukowa Polskiej Akademii Umiejętności i Polskiej Akademii Nauk w Krakowie)
Lecture & Conversation

Co-presented by Columbia University, Fordham University, and the YIVO Institute


Admission: Free

Watch the video

Venue: McNally Amphitheater | 140 West 62nd Street | Gabelli School of Business, Fordham University | New York, NY 10023

This evening focuses on the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the period of the partitions. Magda Teter (Fordham University) and Brian Porter-Szűcs (University of Michigan) will discuss Jewish-Christian relations of this period, the Jews’ place in the social fabric of the Commonwealth, their belonging and exclusion, transformations from the multi-ethnic Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to nineteenth-century nationalist ideologies that simultaneously used and obscured the country’s complex past. The conversation examines the way these perceptions of the past have figured into contemporary memory and historiography in creating competing visions and myths of the past that served modern national ideologies and identities. 


About the Speakers

Magda Teter is Professor of History and the Shvidler Chair of Judaic Studies at Fordham University. She is also a fellow of the American Academy of Jewish Research. Teter is the author of Jews and Heretics in Catholic Poland (Cambridge, 2005), Sinners on Trial (Harvard, 2011), and two edited volumes, as well as numerous articles in English, Italian, Polish, and Hebrew. Her work has been supported by the Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library (2017-2018), the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (2012), the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation (in 2007 and 2012), the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, YIVO Institute, and the Yad Ha-Nadiv Foundation (Israel), among others. In 2002, she was a Harry Starr Fellow in Jewish Studies at Harvard University, in 2007-2008, an Emeline Bigelow Conland Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies also at Harvard University. She has served as the co-editor of the AJS Review and as the Vice-President for Publications of the Association for Jewish Studies.

Brian Porter-Szűcs is an Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of History at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, where he has taught since 1994. He is the author of Poland and the Modern World: Beyond Martyrdom (Wiley Blackwell, 2014), Faith and Fatherland: Catholicism, Modernity, and Poland (Oxford University Press, 2010), and When Nationalism Began to Hate: Imagining Modern Politics in 19th Century Poland (Oxford University Press, 2000), which was translated into Polish as Gdy nacjonalizm zaczął nienawidzić: Wyobrażenia nowoczesnej polityki w dziewiętnastowiecznej Polsce (Pogranicze, 2011). Together with Bruce Berglund, he co-edited Christianity and Modernity in East-Central Europe (Central European University Press, 2010). In early 2019 his book, Całkiem zwyczajny kraj: Historia Polski bez martyrologii, will be released by the Warsaw publisher WAB.