December 07, 2008

Jewish Music Forum Speaker Hasia Diner

The Jewish Music Forum
will host the next lecture in the 2008-2009 series:
December 12, 2008
10:30 am - 12:00 pm
"Engaging Ethnography and Institutionalization in Jewish Music."
This event is sponsored by the American Society for Jewish Music and the American Jewish Historical Society. All events are free and open to the public.

“American Jews, Music and the Memory of the Holocaust: 1945-1962”
Professor Hasia Diner, New York University Respondent: Cantor Bruce Ruben, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
Center for Jewish History / Kovno Room
15 W. 16th Street (between 5th and 6th Aves., north side of the street)
New York, NY 10011

In the years from the end of World War II through the early 1960s American Jewry engaged in a massive, spontaneous, and multi-faceted project to remember the six million Jewish victims of the Nazi brutality. With no direction from any central body, they created multiple times, places, and texts by which to create a memorial culture. In that project music played an important part. From concerts to recordings, from singing at public gatherings, issuing songsters, and creating new liturgical works they took upon themselves the double chore of remembering the tragedy and attempting to invigorate Jewish life in America.

Hasia Diner is the Paul and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History at New York University and the Director of the Goldstein Goren Center for American Jewish History. A specialist in immigration and ethnic history, American Jewish history and the history of American women, she is the author of numerous published books, including In the Almost Promised Land: American Jews and Blacks, 1915-1935 (1977, reissued, 1995); Erin's Daughters in America: Irish Immigrant Women in the Nineteenth Century (1984); A Time for Gathering: The Second Migration, 1820-1880 (1992), the second volume in the Johns Hopkins University Press series, “The Jewish People in America”; and With Reverence and Awe: American Jews and the Myth of Silence After the Holocaust, 1945-1962, which will be published by New York University Press in spring 2009.

Bruce Ruben was awarded the diploma of hazzan from the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1981. A year later he began a twenty-four year tenure at Temple Shaaray Tefila in New York City, where he ran several choirs, put on special music programs, composed numerous liturgical compositions, commissioned works by many other composers, and taught classes on Jewish history, liturgy, and music. He earned his Ph.D. in history from the CUNY Graduate Center in 1997 with a dissertation on the early American Reform rabbi Max Lilienthal. Beginning in July of 2006 Cantor Ruben became the director of the School of Sacred Music, the cantorial school of the Reform Movement. Posted by jmwc at December 7, 2008 01:07 PM