James Loeffler

James Loeffler's picture

Assistant Professor (2006)

Jewish History

Office Hours: 'T 9:30-10:30, Th 2:00-4:00, and by appointment '

Office: 229 Randall

Phone: (434) 924-6408

Fax: (434) 924-7891

Email: jbl6w@virginia.edu

Education

B.A. Harvard University, 1996
M.A. Columbia University, 2000
Ph.D. Columbia University, 2006
James Loeffler

Publications

“Concert Music” The YIVO Encyclopedia of East European Jewish History and Culture (New Haven: Yale University Press, forthcoming).

“Joel Engel and the Development of Jewish Musical Nationalism [Russian],” On the History of Jewish Music in Russia, Volume 2., eds. G. Kopytova and A. Frenkel (St. Petersburg: Russian Institute for the History of the Arts, 2006).

Di Rusishe Progresiv Muzikal Yunyon No. 1 af Amerike: The First Klezmer Union in the United States” in American Klezmer: Its Roots and Offshoots, ed. Mark Slobin (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002).

“Neither the King’s English nor the Rebbetzin’s Yiddish: Yinglish Literature in America,” in American Babel: Literatures of the United States from Abnaki to Zuni, ed. Marc Shell. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002).

Awards and Activities

Academic Vice-Chair, The Jewish Music Forum, Center for Jewish History, 2006-

Irene Fromer Fellow in Jewish Studies, Columbia University, 2005-2006

Hays-Fulbright Doctoral Dissertation Research Award to Russia and Ukraine, 2003-2004

National Foundation for Jewish Culture Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, 2003-2004

Center for Jewish History Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, 2002-2003

Wexner Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1998-2002

Andrew W. Mellon Graduate Fellow in Humanistic Studies, 1998-1999

Current Research

I am revising a book manuscript on the relationship between Jewish culture, politics, and identity in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Russia, tentatively titled: The Most Musical Nation: Jews, Culture, and Nationalism in the Late Russian Empire. Other current projects underway include articles on the role of European aesthetics and anti-Semitism in early Zionist culture and the influence of Russian Jewish political thought on American Jewish communal life.