Book Launch for Naomi Seidman's "Translating the Jewish Freud"

When and Where

Monday, September 09, 2024 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Room 100
Jackman Humanities Building
170 St. George Street

Speakers

Rebecca Comay (University of Toronto)
Miriam Schwartz (PhD Candidate, University of Toronto)
Marsha Hewitt (University of Toronto)

Description

Book Launch for Naomi Seidman's Translating the Jewish Freud

The Book Launch will feature University of Toronto's Rebecca Comay, Miriam Schwartz, and Marsha Hewitt.

Book Description: There is an academic cottage industry on the "Jewish Freud," aiming to detect Jewish influences on Freud, his own feelings about being Jewish, and suppressed traces of Jewishness in his thought. This book takes a different approach, turning its gaze not on Freud but rather on those who seek out his concealed Jewishness. What is it that propels the scholarly aim to show Freud in a Jewish light? Naomi Seidman explores attempts to "touch" Freud (and other famous Jews) through Jewish languages, seeking out his Hebrew name or evidence that he knew some Yiddish. Tracing a history of this drive to bring Freud into Jewish range, Seidman also charts Freud's responses to (and jokes about) this desire.

 

Book Launch Panel: 

Rebecca Comay teaches in the Dept of Philosophy, the Centre for Comparative Literature, and the Program for Literature and Critical Theory, and is affiliated with the Center for Jewish Studies and the Dept of German. She is also on the faculty of the European Graduate School.  She works in a variety of areas, including 19th and 20th German Philosophy (esp Hegel and the Marxist tradition, with a particular interest in Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt School); psychoanalyis; contemporary art and art theory; theatre and performance studies; and the politics of memory and trauma.  Her books include Mourning Sickness: Hegel and the French Revolution, and The Dash - the Other Side of Absolute Knowing, and she is currently working on two book projects, one titled  "Deadlines (literally)" and the other titled "Bad Mothers."

Miriam Schwartz is a PhD candidate in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures and the collaborative program with the Anne Tanenbaum Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Toronto. Her research explores the representation of speech in Jewish literature written in Yiddish and Hebrew during the first half of the twentieth century, in Eastern Europe, Israel, and North and South America. She focuses on issues of translation, orality, and ideology. Prior to joining the University of Toronto, Miriam earned her BA in Literature and MA in Yiddish Literature at Tel Aviv University.

Marsha Hewitt is a professor in the Department for the Study of Religion at the University of Toronto, and the Faculty of Divinity at Trinity College. She is a psychoanalyst. Professor Hewitt teaches courses in method and theory in the study of religion, Freud and critical theory, and psychoanalysis, culture and society. Professor Hewitt’s books include Critical Theory of Religion: A Feminist Analysis, Freud on Religion, Legacies of the Occult: Psychoanalysis, Religion, and Unconscious Communication. Some of her most recent published articles: “Freud and the Unconscious”, “Christian anti-Judaism and early Object Relations Theory”, and “Trance, Dreams, and Possession: A Comparative Psychoanalytic Study”.

 

Respondent:

Naomi Seidman is the Chancellor Jackman Professor of the Arts in the Department for the Study of Religion and the Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies at the University of Toronto. She is th author of five books, including, most recently, The Marriage Plot, Or, How Jews Fell in Love with Love, and with Literature (2016, winner of the Borsch-Rast Prize and Fania Levant Prize in Yiddish Studies from the Modern Language Association), Sarah Schenirer and the Bais Yaakov Movement: A Revolution in the Name of Tradition (2019, Winner of a National Jewish Book Award in Women’s Studies), and Translating the Jewish Freud: Psychoanalysis in Hebrew and Yiddish (Stanford, 2024). Aside from the book prizes, she is the recipient of many major awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship (2016), an NEH Senior Scholar Fellowship at the Center for Jewish History (2016-2017), a SSHRC Insight Grant, two SSHRC Connections Grants, and a SSHRC Partnership Development Grant.  She also wrote a popular podcast on the experience of leaving Hasidic and ultra-Orthodox communities, Heretic in the HouseHeretic in the House - Shalom Hartman Institute, which won a Signal Award in 2023. 

 

 

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This event will be delivered in-person in JHB100 (170 St. George Street) on Monday, September 9, 2024 at 4 PM.

 

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170 St. George Street

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