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November 20th | First Joint Israeli-German School for Doctoral Students in the Field of Humanities | HUJI International

November 20th | First Joint Israeli-German School for Doctoral Students in the Field of Humanities

20 November, 2023

joint israeli-german school for doctoral students humanities

From left to right: Prof. Tamir Sheafer, Rector, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Prof. Eva Inés Obergfell, Rector, University of Leipzig; Professor Yfaat Weiss, Director, Dubnow Institute (Credit: Swen Reichhold, Leipzig University)

 

The "German Research Foundation" (DFG) has greenlit funding for a pioneering joint doctoral school, an exciting international collaboration between the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the University of Leipzig, and the Dubnow Institute in Leipzig. This groundbreaking academic initiative marks a significant step towards fostering international collaboration in the field of humanities.

 

Program Focus and Structure 

Scheduled to open in Jerusalem in the summer of 2024, the school will launch the program "Belongings: Jewish Material Culture in Twentieth-Century Europe and Beyond." The program will provide a unique opportunity for students to immerse themselves in the study of Jewish material culture in the 20th century and to explore the complex web of relationships between Jews and their surrounding environments. This initiative will immerse 22 research students in interdisciplinary studies, covering history, philosophy, literature, cultural studies, and art history. Each doctoral thesis will enjoy four years of full funding and joint supervision by senior researchers from all three institutions.

 

Cultivating the Next Generation of Researchers

Setting itself apart, the join venture aims to cultivate a new generation of researchers equipped to seamlessly integrate into global educational and cultural institutions. Professor Yfaat Weiss, the director of the Dubnow Institute and a member of the Faculty of Humanities at the Hebrew University, who will head the school, expressed her anticipation: "The seeds of this joint venture were planted in the summer of 2019 under very different circumstances from today. We hope to open the first cycle in Jerusalem in August 2024 under infinitely better conditions. Recent times have emphasized the importance of knowledge, especially a deep understanding of Jewish history, as a safeguard against global amnesia. Our collaborative approach and the opportunity for students to study in both Jerusalem and Leipzig represent a small yet meaningful step towards preserving the knowledge of humanity in these challenging times."

 

Diverse Senior Researchers

Professor Benjamin Pollock, professor of Jewish thought at the Hebrew University and director of the Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Center, who will head the Israeli side of the school, added: "The joint learning of Israeli and international students in Jewish studies, the diversity of the fields of expertise of the senior scholars who will teach in the program, the research focus on material culture – these features make this graduate school one of a kind. In these trying times, it is heartening to recall Jerusalem's potential as a place where diverse worlds of research and culture converge, expanding the horizons of academic discourse."

 

The joint venture boasts the involvement of thirteen senior researchers, including professors from the University of Leipzig, one of Germany's oldest universities, faculty members from the Hebrew University's Faculty of Humanities, and researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Jewish History and Culture - Simon Dubnow, one of Europe's leading institutes in the field.

 

Future Applications

In the coming weeks, the school will release a call for research student applications to be shared across relevant networks. Accepted students will have the unique opportunity to pursue their doctorate in one of the parent universities—Jerusalem or Leipzig—under joint supervision and full funding for a four-year program. The school's admissions committee will review submissions and conduct interviews with applicants, with more details to follow in due course.