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Jennifer E. Singletary

Jennifer E. Singletary

Jennifer E. Singletary

Assistant Research Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies and Jewish Studies
325 Weaver Building, University Park, PA 16802
Pronouns: she/her

Biography:

I am a social historian who studies Jewish history after 1800, with a focus on migration processes in a comparative and transnational framework. A closely related topic of my research is Jewish life in the modern city, primarily in Europe and North America.

My latest study Between Borders: The Great Jewish Migration from Eastern Europe shifts the focus from the dominant immigration narrative in American and Israeli/Zionist history to the actual journeys of Jewish migrants and refugees, before and after the Holocaust. I question the validity of influential narratives about Jewish migration by stressing the importance of comparative approaches. Between Borders transcends national subfields, literally shedding light on spaces between borders. A major theme is the emergence and transformation of the scholarship about Jewish and general migration and flight during the twentieth century.

My book, Sundays at Sinai: A Jewish Congregation in Chicago, looks at a prominent American Jewish Reform temple that was established in 1861 by German-speaking Jewish immigrants. One of its signature reforms was the introduction of Sunday services. The drive towards religious Reform went hand in hand with a remarkable degree of civic engagement in and beyond Chicago.

I teach a range of courses about modern Jewish, European and U.S. history. Together with my colleague Eliyana Adler I regularly offer the embedded course Hist/JSt 426 about the history of the Holocaust. This course includes a one-week trip to memorial sites in Eastern Europe over spring break.


Awards and Service:

Herbert R. Bloch Jr. Memorial Fellow, American Jewish Archives (2021/22)

Maurice Amado Foundation Fellow, Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, University of Pennsylvania (2021)

Outstanding Teaching Award for Tenure-Line Faculty, College of Liberal Arts (2013)


Recent Courses:

HIST121 – Holocaust
HIST115 – American Jewish History
HIST426 – Holocaust (with embedded trip option to Eastern Europe)

Education Details:

Ph.D. in Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean, Brown University (2014)
A.M. in Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean, Brown University (2007)
M.A. in English, Pennsylvania State University (2005)
B.A. in Philosophy and Religion, Boston University (2002)
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