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Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies

Jason Lustig and book

Book Excerpt: A Time to Gather by Jason Lustig

January 3, 2022 by Jason Lustig

The Nazi Party’s rise to power and the concomitant exclusion of Jews from public life led to a somewhat surprising strengthening of Jewish institutions, the Gesamtarchiv included.

Leaf Through a Good Book

December 6, 2021 by Alex Reshanov

Keep your to-read list up-to-date with our fall book list, featuring a selection of titles from College of Liberal Arts faculty members and alumni.

Animated illustration of a book and cityscape within a snow globe with letters falling like snow.

Shake Up Your Winter Reading

December 11, 2020 by Michelle Bryant

Winter 2020-21 books from our college community.

Sadaham Yathra monks walking along a wooden path.

The Earth’s Keepers: How Religion Can Guide Environmentalism

April 22, 2019 by Rachel White

If you knew in the next life you’d become a tree, you might hesitate before you cut one down. Or if you were to become one of the ocean’s fish, perhaps you’d be more careful about how you dispose of certain plastics. That’s Karma, at least as it’s applied in an environmental context, which might […]

menorah with all candles lit

How Hanukkah Has Changed in the U.S.

January 11, 2018 by Tatjana Lichtenstein

The Jewish holiday Hanukkah is upon us, and to mark the eight-day holiday, dignitaries will gather to light the National Menorah across from the White House, and families will light their own nine-armed menorahs, known as Hanukkiot, one candle per day for eight days. Although Hanukkah today is one of the most popular and recognizable […]

Michal Kirschbaum art

Jewish Latin America Figures Prominently in Schusterman Center’s Activities

March 12, 2015 by Susanna Sharpe

While the study of Jewish Latin America and Jewish Latinas/os might seem a small and specialized niche, the themes that emerge are often universal: cultural clashes, assimilation and blending in, loss, being part yet apart. Students and scholars of Latin American studies often ponder these very same questions. When these two disciplines meet or overlap, […]

UT Faculty Chronicle Texas Cultural History. Photo by Micheal O'Brien.

UT Faculty Chronicle Texas Cultural History

November 4, 2013 by Jessica Sinn

Texas Bookshelf is a 16-book series that will be published by University of Texas Press chronicling the state’s rich culture and history. The five-year project is set to launch in 2017 and will cover a diverse range of topics—from the Tejano experience to Texas food culture to performing arts. This is the first project undertaken […]

Alyssa Ramirez

English Alumna Alyssa Ramirez Found Inspiration, Employment Through Undergraduate Research Position

July 22, 2013 by Molly Wahlberg

Many liberal arts alumni speak fondly of formative professors and classes that helped shape their career path, and Alyssa Ramirez, who received her B.A. in English from The University of Texas at Austin in 2010, is no exception. During her time at the university, Ramirez worked as an undergraduate research apprentice for her favorite professor, […]

Image of sky bridge connecting the new building to the Student Activity Center makes an ideal study spot.

A Space to Call Home

April 1, 2013 by Molly Wahlberg

Take a walk through the new College of Liberal Arts Building, and the building feels as fresh and modern as it feels warm and lived-in—an impressive feat for a place that just opened in January. “This is our shot at greatness,” says Randy Diehl, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “This building ensures that […]

Fall foliage.

Books: Fall 2012

October 26, 2012 by Molly Wahlberg

Fall 2012 titles from our college community.

Jewish Studies Center Meets $6 Million Challenge Grant

May 26, 2011 by Gary Susswein

The Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies has matched a $6 million grant from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Foundation, ensuring the continued growth of Jewish studies at The University of Texas at Austin. Over the past five years, the center has emerged as a nexus for the study of Jewish thought, culture and history, with […]

In Memoriam with black background

In Memoriam: Spring 2010

May 10, 2010 by Jessica Sinn

Shearer Davis Bowman, professor emeritus of history, died Dec. 4 at age 60. In 1986 Bowman began his career at The University of Texas at Austin, where he taught American history for 15 years. He wrote “Masters and Lords” and “At the Precipice,” which will be published this spring, as well as numerous articles and reviews. […]

group gathered at night outside of capital

Tear Down the Wall

May 10, 2010 by Gary Susswein

Students re-enact Berlin Wall destruction 20 years later Students from The University of Texas and other local schools came to the South Mall one evening last November carrying cardboard boxes that evoked the wall that once divided East and West Berlin. Like the eastern side of the wall, one side of each box was bare. […]

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