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Current PhD Students | Jack, Joseph & Morton Mandel School for Advanced Studies in the Humanities

Current PhD Students

Yona Gonopolsky

Yona Gonopolsky

Classical studies and Comparative Religion

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Subject: The Transition from The Upper Palaeolithic To the Epipalaeolithic In the Southern Levant And the Development of The Microlithic Technology.

Supervisor: Nigel Goring-Morris

Abstract: The doctoral dissertation focuses on one of the important developments in the of ancient hunting methods in the southern Levant. This change took place during the transition between the transition from the Upper Paleolithic to the Epipaleolithic periods (some 25,000 years ago), due to the development of microlithic tools (small stone tools, carefully designed in standard shapes, used to form composite projectile tools).
The study examines stone tool assemblages from several sites in the southern Levant from the end of the Upper Paleolithic and the beginning of the Epipaleolithic. By combine three different methods to analyze stone tool production (attribute analysis, experimental knapping and core refitting) the study aims to trace the source of this change and its evolution in terms of chronology, technology and style.
 

Bio: I have a BA and MA from the Classics Department of the Hebrew University. My PhD study deals with the verbal conceptualization of nonverbal cues in Ancient Greek. I am also interested in Greek phraseology in general, Greek sociolinguistics, representation of interpersonal communicative conventions in classical literature and characterization techniques in Greek literature. Also, I teach Greek and Latin and write and translate poetry (in and into Hebrew).

Publications:

From Jonah to Jesus and back: three Ways of Characterization and their Reverse Application (Paper in proccess)

President Stipend 2018/19

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Maya Inbar

Maya Inbar

Department of Linguistics

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Subject: Neural oscillations in speech processing: A language-in-interaction perspective

Supervisor: Dr. Eitan Grossman & Dr. Ayelet N. Landau

 

Presidential stipend 2017/18

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ORI

Ori Kinberg

Hebrew Literature 

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Subject:  The Poems of Niv Sefatayyim by Joseph Zark and his Circle: Hebrew Literary Culture in 15th Century Italy

Supervisor:  Dr. Jonathan Vardi 

Abstract:  During the 15th century, while Europe is swept by the Renaissance, numerous Jews of various ‎origins immigrate to Italy. Hebrew writers from Ashkenaz, Provence and Spain, alongside their ‎coreligionists of the local Italian communities, combine trends and traditions, composing a ‎literature that merges the religious and the secular, the old and the contemporary, the ‎imported and the local. ‎
My research begins with "Niv Sefataim (“Fruit of the Lips”), a collection of over 120 poems ‎written by Yosef Zark, an immigrant from Spain, and his circle of associates in northern Italy. ‎Through the network of relationships and exchanges reflected in this collection, I examine the ‎history and poetics of 15th-century Hebrew poetry in Italy.‎

Bio A graduate student in the department of Hebrew literature. I have studied my B.A. and M.A. in Jerusalem, first in Hebrew literature and Philosophy, later specializing in Medieval literature. I work mainly on Hebrew poetry written in Medieval and Renaissance Italy, and maintains an interest in analytic theories of literature and the philosophy of imagination.

President Stipend 2021/22

MA Alumni 2019/20

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tamar

Tamar Kojman

Department of History

Subject: The "Apolitical" German and the Question of German Statehood, 1830-1919

Supervisor: Prof. Ofer Ashkenazi

Daniel Lehman1

Daniel Lehmann

Department of History

Department of History

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Subject: Representations of the Reformation in the Protestant-Jewish Polemic: Intra-Christian Conflict in the "Presence" of Jews

Supervisor: Prof. Ram Ben-Shalom, Dr. Aya Elyada 

Abstract: My dissertation aims to explore the representation, or representations, of the Reformation in Protestant anti-Jewish polemics. It considers the ways in which Protestants referred or reacted to disputes with Catholics or with other Protestants while confronting Jews (confrontations imagined or real)—or, from a different angle, the ways in which Jewish contexts affected Protestant portrayals of intra-Christian conflict. Additionally, it attempts to understand how these references and reactions to the Reformation informed the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century polemic against the Jews, and bear upon its place in Adversus Judaeos history. In broader strokes, the proposed dissertation is a study of how the "presence" of Jews shaped Christian expression and thought, and of how such Christian expression and thought shaped engagement with a Jewish "presence."

The Reformation left its mark on practically every sphere of Western European life, calling much of what Christians had once taken for granted into question. That traces of the Reformation, and of Reformation conflict, in fact emerge in the anti-Jewish polemic is, therefore, hardly surprising—however, the scope and specificity, and correspondingly, impact, of this Reformation discourse still needs to be clarified. While the polemic against the Jews offered a convenient setting for validating a specific version of Christianity, for example, by attributing Jewish "errors" to other Christians, it was not necessarily the most natural grounds for a detailed discussion of Reformation issues or debates. In this sense, the focus of my research is not only a particular chapter in the history of the Christian-Jewish polemic or the unique convergence of, say, Protestant-Catholic or Lutheran-Reformed tensions and Christian-Jewish controversy, but also the Reformation itself, as refracted through a distinctly Jewish lens.
 

Bio: I completed my BA studies in the History Department, the School of History Honors Program, and the Amirim Honors Program in the Humanities; and my MA studies in the History Department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. I am currently researching representations of the Reformation in the Protestant-Jewish polemic of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Publications:

"'Such an Illumination Cannot Occur': Anthonius Margaritha, the Reformation, and the Polemic against the Jews," Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 111 (2020), forthcoming.

"אפוקליפסה של משבר נוצרי: 'אלגוריה קדושה' של יאן פרובוסט כתגובה לראשית הרפורמציה", מוזה: כתב עת לתלמידי מחקר במדעי הרוח 3 (2019), 37-20.

"בין יהדות לנצרו(יו)ת, בין אתנוגרפיה לפולמוס: כתיבתו של אנטוניוס מרגריטה על הקבלה ב'האמונה היהודית כולה', היה היה: במה צעירה להיסטוריה 14 (2019), 48-29.

“Sebastian Münster and His Sources: The Messiah in Rome and the Convergence of Christian-Jewish Polemic and Intra-Christian Conflict,” Journal of Early Modern Christianity 8 (2021): 135-151.

"'Such an Illumination Cannot Occur': Anthonius Margaritha, the Reformation, and the Polemic against the Jews," Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 111 (2020): 55-77.

"אפוקליפסה של משבר נוצרי: 'אלגוריה קדושה' של יאן פרובוסט כתגובה לראשית הרפורמציה", מוזה: כתב עת לתלמידי מחקר במדעי הרוח 3 (2019): 37-20.

"בין יהדות לנצרו(יו)ת, בין אתנוגרפיה לפולמוס: כתיבתו של אנטוניוס מרגריטה על הקבלה ב'האמונה היהודית כולה', היה היה: במה צעירה להיסטוריה 14 (2019): 48-29.
 

President Stipend 2018/19

Rotenstreich Stipend 2020/21

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noam

Noam Lev El

Department of Jewish Thought

Subject:  From Sepharad to Safed: Organization of Knowledge in Sixteenth-Century Kabbalah

Supervisor: Prof. Jonathan Garb

moti

Mordechai (Motti) Levy

Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies

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Research subject:  Shaping Royal Self-Images: Self-Narratives in the Service of Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal Dynasties in the 16th and 17th Centuries

Supervisor: Prof. Eyal Ginio and Dr. Julia Rubanovich

Bio: I hold a B.A. with a major in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies and a minor in Arabic Language and Literature, as well as an M.A. in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies. I completed both of my degrees with honors. My Master's thesis, entitled "The Ottoman Sultan in Safavid Shah's Eyes: Self and Other Perception in The Personal Writings of Shah Tahmasp I (r. 1524-1576)," was written under the supervision of Prof. Eyal Ginio and Dr. Julia Rubanovich. It aimed to examine the ways in which the second Safavid ruler of Persia constructed and presented the political, cultural, and religious image of the Ottoman empire and its ruler Suleiman I (r. 1520-1566), as opposed to how he presented his own image.

Abstract My doctoral dissertation revolves around the question of why various members of the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal dynasties engaged in the writing of self-narratives characterized by autobiographical elements during the 16th and 17th centuries. Through a systematic and careful reading of diverse self-narratives written in Persian, Ottoman-Turkish, and Arabic, I seek to analyze the ways in which different rulers, princes, and princesses in these royal houses shaped and represented their self-images and understood such notions as kingship, sovereignty, legitimacy, and subjectivity.

Azrieli Scholarship 2021/22

Presidents Stipend 2020/21

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nadav_matalon

Nadav Matalon

Linguistics

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Subject: Prosody in Hebrew and English spoken discourse

Supervisor: Michal Marmorstein, Elisha Moses, Dagmar Barth-Weingarten

Abstract: My PhD research aims at deconstructing the well-known notion of “Question Prosody” – a final rising tone – into a set of different question-type prosodies, each carrying a unique interactional meaning and mobilizes a different type of response in natural conversation.

Bio: Nadav Matalon is a PhD student in the Linguistics Department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He holds a B.Mus. from the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance, and a M.A. (magna cum laude) from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Nadav is interested in the nature of the prosodic sign - what are its pertinent acoustic building blocks, and what meanings does it carry in human communication.

Publications:

Matalon, N. (2021).The Camel Humps prosodic pattern: Listing for disaffiliating in spoken Hebrew. In Building Categories in Interaction: Linguistic resources at work, Mauri, C., Fiorentini, I. & Goria, E. (eds), 155-186. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Marmorstein, M. & Matalon, N. (2021). Responses within activities: Alignment via Egyptian Arabic ?ah ‘yeah’ in extended turns. Interactional Linguistics.

Biron, T., Baum, D., Freche, D., Matalon, N., Ehrmann, N., Weinreb, E., ... & Moses, E. (2021). Automatic detection of prosodic boundaries in spontaneous speech. Plos one16(5), e0250969.

 

Presidential Stipend 2019/20

 

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