Judith R. Baskin

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Judith Reesa Baskin
Born 1950
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Occupation Faculty
Title Philip H. Knight Professor of Humanities
Associate Dean of Arts and Sciences
Director of the Harold Schnitzer Family Program in Judaic Studies
Spouse(s) Warren Stuart Ginsberg
Awards 2010 National Jewish Book Award for Anthologies and Collections
Academic background
Education Antioch College, Yale University
Thesis title Reflections of Attitudes towards the Gentiles in Jewish and Christian Exegesis of Jethro, Balaam, and Job[1]
Thesis year 1976
Academic work
Discipline Religion
Institutions University of Oregon
University at Albany, SUNY
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Main interests Jewish women; Jewish history, religion and culture

Judith R. Baskin (born 1950) is a religious studies scholar and the Philip H. Knight Professor of Humanities at the University of Oregon. She held positions at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Yale University, and State University of New York at Albany, prior to accepting a faculty position at the University of Oregon in 2000. She was appointed Associate Dean for Humanities in the College of Arts and Sciences in July, 2009.

Early life and education

Judith Reesa Baskin was born in 1950 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, the daughter of Bernard and Marjorie Ann (née Shatz) Baskin.[2]

She earned a baccalaureate degree in 1971 from Antioch College, including a year abroad at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She married Warren Stuart Ginsberg in 1973; they have a son and a daughter.[2]

Yale University awarded her a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Medieval Studies in 1976.[3]

Career

From 1976–1988 Baskin taught at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. In 1991, early in her academic career, she is quoted writing that she saw her work adding to "general knowledge of the diversity and richness of Jewish women's pasts".[4]

From 1988–2000 she taught at the University at Albany, SUNY, and served as Chair of the Department of Judaic Studies. Baskin has been at the University of Oregon since 2000 as Director of the Harold Schnitzer Family Program in Judaic Studies[5] and Philip H. Knight Professor of Humanities, and in July 2009 she was named Associate Dean for Humanities in the College of Arts and Sciences.[6]

Baskin has written and edited books on topics in Jewish history and culture:[7]

  • Midrashic Women: Formations of the Feminine in Rabbinic Literature (2002).
  • Pharaoh's Counsellors: Job, Jethro and Balaam in Rabbinic and Patristic Tradition (1983).
  • Editor, Jewish Women in Historical Perspective (1991, 1998).
  • Editor, Women of the Word: Jewish Women and Jewish Writing (1994).
  • Editor, The Cambridge Dictionary of Judaism and Jewish Culture (2011)
  • Co-editor with Kenneth Seeskin, The Cambridge Guide to Jewish History, Religion, and Culture (2010), (2010 National Jewish Book Award winner, first place in anthologies and collections).[8]

Selected honors and awards

Baskin served as President of the Association for Jewish Studies from 2004 through 2006, and is listed as an "Honorary Director" of the association.[3][4][9]

Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Los Angeles campus, awarded Baskin a Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa, in 2012. The citation noted, "An academic leader, prize-winning teacher and prolific author, Dr. Baskin has taken a scholarly approach to the place of Jewish women in historical perspective."[10]

Baskin's record of scholarship and research has earned other honors:[3]

  • 1971–76, Danforth Foundation Fellow
  • 1971, Woodrow Wilson Fellow (Honorary)
  • 1980, American Council of Learned Societies: Semester Research Grant for Recent Recipients of the Ph.D.
  • 1993, Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching, SUNY system
  • 1995, Collins Fellow (awarded for Outstanding Service, University at Albany)
  • 2002–present, Philip H. Knight Professor of Humanities, University of Oregon
  • 2010, National Jewish Book Award, co-editor with Kenneth Seeskin, The Cambridge Survey of Jewish History, Religion, and Culture[11]

See also

References

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