Ethan Katz

Associate Professor

Jewish, Late Modern Europe


I am a scholar of the modern Jewish experience, and I am equally fascinated by the history of France and the Francophone world.

My scholarship to date has focused in several distinct yet overlapping areas. The first is the history of exclusion, belonging, and inter-ethnic relations for Jews and Muslims in France and the Francophone world. These were the central themes of my first book, The Burdens of Brotherhood: Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France (Harvard University Press, 2015). There I traced the entangled and disparate paths of Jews and Muslims in France since World War I, and their triangular relationship with one another and with the French state and notions of what it means to be French. In 2018, the book was translated into French and it subsequently become the basis for a major exhibition that appeared at Paris's National Museum for the History of Immigration in the spring and summer of 2022. Along with several other scholars, I revisited many of the themes from my first book in light of recent developments in France, in a special issue of the journal Jewish History that I co-edited, entitled "Judeophobia and Islamophobia in France Before and After Charlie Hebdo and Hyper Cacher."

In the course of the research for my first book, I developed a strong interest as well in a second area, the history of Jews in colonial societies. My co-edited book (with Lisa Moses Leff and Maud Mandel) Colonialism and the Jews (Indiana, 2017) offers the most extended examination to date of Jewish history in light of the new colonial history (and vice versa), focusing on the Francophone sphere but including comparisons that stretch as far as the British Antipodes, the Russian hinterlands, and Eastern European colonial aspirations in Latin America.

My current book project takes many of these themes in a new direction and enters into a third field, Holocaust Studies. This project, provisionally entitled Freeing the Empire: The Uprising of Jews and Antisemites That Helped Win World War II, chronicles the fascinating yet little-known story of an uprising in Algiers from 1940 to 1943 that proved vital to the success of Operation Torch. The insurgents of Algiers were made up of mostly Jewish shock troops working alongside arch-conservative French officers and businessmen and coordinating with the Allied forces. This book offers a micro-history in global context, examining in intricate detail the makeup and operations of this movement, while using their story to rethink more broadly the motivations, means, and character of wartime resistance and liberation. 

My work on Jewish history, histories of exclusion, colonialism, and the Holocaust led me to take a greater interest in the study of historical and contemporary antisemitism. For the past several years, I have taken a growing role in public conversations about antisemitism on and beyond the Berkeley campus. Since 2021, I have served as the Chair of the Chancellor’s Advisory Committee on Jewish Student Life and Campus Climate. In the spring of 2019, I co-founded  the Antisemitism Education Initiative at Berkeley, which I have co-directed for the past four years and built into a major presence in campus, local, and national conversations about how to assess and combat antisemitism in universities today. This effort has brought together administrators, faculty, and leaders of the campus Jewish community to create a sustained program of education around antisemitism. It includes online and in-person trainings for staff and students, regular lectures by leading experts from around the world, and a widely praised training film that we created. From 2021 to 2023, I also co-chaired a task force of the Association for Jewish Studies on antisemitism and academic freedom, which produced a set of guidelines that have been widely embraced by a number of colleagues across the country. I regularly give trainings and lectures about historical and contemporary antisemitism for academic, community, and general audiences, and those of us leading the initiative are regularly consulted by other universities, policy makers, and Jewish communal leaders. 

I have also had a sustained interest in new interpretations of the relationship between the secular and religion in modern Jewish life. This was the subject of another co-edited book (with Ari Joskowicz), Secularism in Question: Jews and Judaism in Modern Times (UPenn Press, 2015), which attempted the first sustained engagement between the so-called "secularism debate" of the early twenty-first century and Jewish studies. I have just finished co-editing (with Elisha Anscelovits and Sergey Dolgopolski) a new book that takes these issues in new direction. Our focus is at once to challenge and to better understand the chasm between the methods and bodies of knowledge of the more text-focused, traditionalist perspectives on Jewish studies found in much of the religious world, and the more contextual, theoretical, and insistently scientific perspective of most scholars of academic Jewish studies. Our book, When Jews Argue: Between the University and the Beit Midrash, will appear later this year from Routledge, and as a new volume of the annual Jewish Law Association Studies. My work on this new book entailed developing a deeper interest in Rabbinics and Jewish law, which I combined with questions of Holocaust memory in a contribution I co-authored for this book entitled "The Mothers, the Mamzerim, and the Rabbis: A Post-Holocaust Halakhic Debate as Legal and Historical Source." 

In all of my work, transnational and comparative perspectives are fundamental to the approach, and I frequently draw insights from various disciplines outside of History.

I have regularly taught courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level on Jewish history, Jewish law and ritual, Jews of France and the Francophone world, Jewish-Muslim encounters, late modern Europe, the Mediterranean, modern France and its empire, and historical methodologies.

I am eager to work with graduate students with interests that intersect with any of my own research and teaching emphases, and would be happy to help advise prospective students on the application process.


Research Interests

  • Modern Jewish history
  • Modern France and its empire
  • Antisemitism 
  • Islamophobia
  • North Africa
  • Religion and secularism in the modern world
  • Jewish-Muslim relations
  • Jewish law
  • Collective memory
  • Jews in colonial societies
  • Trans-national history
  • History of citizenship

Education

PhD, 2009, University of Wisconsin-Madison, History
MA, 2005, University of Wisconsin-Madison, History
BA, 2002, Amherst College, History and French, Summa Cum Laude

Employment

Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies, University of California, Berkeley, 2018-present

Associate Professor of History, University of Cincinnati, 2016-2018

Lady Davis Visiting Professor in Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 2016-2017

Assistant Professor of History, University of Cincinnati, 2010-2016

Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Spring 2009


Select Honors & Awards

Honorable mention, Koren Prize for the best article of the year in French History, Society for French Historical Studies, 2021

Honorable mention, National Jewish Book Award (category of Anthologies and Collections), Jewish Book Council, 2019

J. Russell Major Prize for the best book in French history, American Historical Association, 2016

American Library in Paris Book Award for the most distinguished book in English about France or the French, American Library in Paris and the Florence Gould Foundation, 2016

CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title, 2016

Ohio Academy of History Distinguished Book Award, junior category, 2017

David H. Pinkney Prize for the best book in French history by a North American-based scholar, Society for French Historical Studies, 2016

National Jewish Book Award (category of Writing Based on Archival Material), Jewish Book Council, 2015

Honorable Mention, Wylie Prize in French Cultural Studies (given every two years for the best book in French cultural or social studies by a North America-based scholar), New York University French Department, 2016 (for 2014-2015 competition)


Select Grants & Fellowships

Matrix Faculty Fellowship, Univeresity of California-Berkeley, 2022-2023

Humanities Research Fellowship, University of California-Berkeley, 2021-2022

Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, affiliated fellowship, University of Pennsylvania, 2018-2019

Yad HaNadiv/Beracha Visiting Fellowship in Jewish Studies, 2016-2017

Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, United Holocaust Memorial Museum, 8-month Visiting Fellowship, 2016-2017 (declined)

Lady Davis Visiting Professor Fellowship, Hebrew University, 2016-2017

Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism (Hebrew University), Visiting Scholar for the academic year, 2016-2017

Taft Center faculty release fellowship, University of Cincinnati, 2016-2017 (deferred to 2017-2018)

Yad Vashem International Institute for Holocaust Research, Postdoctoral fellowship. 2016-2017 (declined)

Frankel Center for Advanced Judaic Studies year-long research and writing fellowship, University of Michigan, 2012-2013 (declined

Charles Phelps Taft Center year-long writing fellowship, University of Cincinnati, 2012-2013

Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies year-long research and writing fellowship, University of Pennsylvania, 2009-2010

Hazel D. Cole Postdoctoral Fellowship in Jewish Studies, University of Washington, 2009-2010 (declined)

Bourse Chateaubriand for dissertation research in France, French Foreign MInistry, 2005-2006

George L. Mosse Distinguished Graduate Fellowship, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2002-2009


Books & Edited Collections

"The Burdens of Brotherhood" by Ethan B. Katz The Burdens of Brotherhood: Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015.
"Colonialism and the Jews" Co-editor (with Lisa Leff and Maud Mandel), Colonialism and the Jews. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017.
"Secularism in Question" Co-editor (with Ari Joskowicz), Secularism in Question: Jews and Judaism in Modern Times. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015.

Co-editor (with Sergey Dolgopolski and Elisha Ancselovits), When Jews Argue: Between the University and the Beit Midrash (Routledge, 2023, also published as Volume XXXI of Jewish Law Association Studies): https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003364078/jews-argu...

Co-editor (with Jonathan Judaken), special issue on "Jews and Muslims in France Before and After Charlie Hebdo and Hyper Cacher," Jewish History 32, 1, 2018: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10835-018-9305-5


Select Refereed Journal Articles & Book Chapters

“Muslims as Brothers or Strangers? French Jewish Thinkers Confront the Moral Dilemmas of the French Algerian War.” Extended interpretive essay followed by four short translations from French. Invited chapter in The Stranger in Early Modern and Modern Jewish Tradition, eds. Catherine Allache-Bartlett and Joachim Schlör (Leiden: Brill, 2021).

“Who Were the Jewish Underground of Algiers? A Sectorial Analysis of the Paths to Resistance,” in Aviad Moreno, et al., eds., The Longue durée of Jews from Islamic Lands [Hebrew] (Sde-Boker: The Ben-Gurion Institute for the Study of Israel & Zionism, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 2021).

“Sartre’s Algerian Jewish Question,” in Manuela Consonni and Vivian Liska, eds., Sartre, Jews, and the Other: Rethinking Antisemitism, Race, and Gender (Oldenbourg: De Gruyter, 2020). 

“Jewish Citizens of an Imperial Nation-State: Toward a French-Algerian Frame for French Jewish History,” French Historical Studies 43, 1 (February 2020): 63-84.

"An Imperial Entanglement: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and Colonialism," part of proposed roundtable on "Rethinking Anti-Semitism," American Historical Review 123, 4 (2018): 1190-1209.

"Where do the Hijab and the Kippah Belong? On Being Publicly Jewish or Muslim in Post-Hebdo France," special issue on "Before and After Charlie Hebdo and Hyper Cacher: The Changing Landscape for Jews and Muslims in France, Jewish History 32, 1, 2018, forthcoming.

"Crémieux's Children: Joseph Reinach, Léon Blum, and René Cassin as Jews of French Empire," in Katz, Leff, and Mandel, eds., Colonialism and the Jews (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017).

Co-author (with Lisa Moses Leff and Maud Mandel), "Introduction: Engaging Jewish History and Colonial History," in Katz, Leff, and Mandel, eds., Colonialism and the Jews (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017).

Co-author (with Maud Mandel), "'The French Jewish Community Speaks to you with One Voice': Dissent and the Shaping of French Jewish Politics since World War II," in Zvi Kaplan and Nadia Malinovich, eds., Re-examining the Jews of Modern France: Images and Identities (Leiden: Brill, 2016).

"Shifting Hierarchies of Exclusion: Colonialism, Anti-Semitism, and Islamophobia in European History," CrossCurrents 65, 3 (September 2015): 356-69.

Co-author (with Ari Joskowicz), "Rethinking Jews and Secularism," in Ari Joskowicz and Ethan Katz, eds., Secularism in Question: Jews and Judaism in Modern Times (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015).

"Secular French Nationhood and Its Discontents: Jews as Muslims and Religion as Race in Occupied France (1940-1944)," in Joskowicz and Katz, eds., Secularism in Question: Jews and Judaism in Modern Times (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015).

"Between Emancipation and Persecution: Algerian Jewish Memory in the Longue Durée," Journal of North African Studies 17, 5 (November 2012): 793-820.

"Did the Paris Mosque Save Jews? A Mystery and Its Memory," Jewish Quarterly Review, Vol. 102, No. 2 (2012): 256-287.

"Tracing the Shadow of Palestine: The Zionist-Arab Conflict and Jewish-Muslim Relations in France, 1914-1945," in Nathalie Debrauwere-Miller, ed., The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict in the Francophone World (New York: Routledge, 2010).

"Displaced Historians, Dialectical Histories: George L. Mosse, Peter Gay, and Germany's Multiple Paths in the Twentieth Century," Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, Vol. 7, No. 2 (2008), pp. 135-55.

"Memory at the Front: The Struggle Over Revolutionary Commemoration in Occupied France, 1940-1944," Journal of European Studies, Vol. 35, No. 2 (2005), pp. 153-168.

Professor Ethan Katz

Contact

2227 Dwinelle Hall

ebkatz@berkeley.edu

Office Hours