Nan Goodman
- Nan Goodman has been selected to be a Fellow for Fall 2022 atthe Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at theUniversity of Pennsylvania.While at Penn, she’ll be working on her current book as part
- Nan Goodman,Professor, English and Jewish Studies and Editor in Chief, English Language Notes, recently published the following:“The Jewish Apostate and the American Expatriate: Leave-Taking in the Early American
- Earlier this month, Professor NanGoodman delivered a talk titled “Hayonian Epistemology and the Tripartite Jewish God in the Age of Locke” at a conference on Nehemiah Hiyya Hayon at the University of Sarajevo in Bosnia
- We are excited to announce the appointment ofProfessor Elias Sacksas the new Director of the Program in Jewish Studies. Professor Sacks succeedsProfessor Nan Goodman, who will continue to serve as a faculty member with the Program
- The Program in Jewish Studies is excited to announce that Nan Goodman, Director of the Program in Jewish Studies and Professor of English and Jewish Studies, has been awarded a Boulder Faculty Assembly Excellence Award in
- We are pleased to announceProfessorNan Goodman, Director of the Program in Jewish Studies and Professor of English and Jewish Studies, recently published her newest book, The Puritan Cosmopolis:The Law of Nations and the Early
- Nan Goodman, Director of the Program in Jewish Studies and Professor of English, publishes "Sabbatai Sevi and the Ottoman Jews in Increase Mather’sThe Mystery of Israel’s Salvation,” inNew Approaches to Puritan
- Recently, Dr. Nan Goodman was interviewed by Chris Leppek from Intermountain Jewish News, a weekly newspaperthat covers events in Colorado and surrounding states as well asIsrael and Jewish communities around the
- Nan Goodman, Director of the Program in Jewish Studies and Professor of English, publishes "Sabbatai Sevi and the Ottoman Jews in Increase Mather’s The Mystery of Israel’s Salvation,” inNew Approaches to Puritan Studies,
- In Act I, Scene 1 of the Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman play, “You Can’t Take It With You,” the character known as Grandpa, the patriarch of the eccentric Vanderhof family, returns home after attending the graduation ceremony at Columbia University