By Donald H. Harrison
LONG BEACH, Calif.— Prof. Hasia Diner, director of New York University's
Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History, finds herself in an
anomalous situation. On the one hand, colleagues in the field of American
Jewish History honor her so often as a trailblazer, she gets embarrassed.
On the other hand, she feels that professors from such related fields as
American History and Modern Jewish History rarely give American Jewish History
its due as a separate discipline.
Both aspects of the NYU professor's career came into focus yesterday when
participants of the 12th annual conference of the Western Jewish Studies
Association dined twice with Diner—at a luncheon where four colleagues paid
tribute to her innovation in the field of American Jewish History, and later at
a dinner at which Diner addressed the issues confronting her academic
discipline. The conference was held at California State University, Long
Beach.
Hasia Diner enjoys a light moment with a colleague at Western
Jewish Studies Association
Ava Kahn, who has authored such books as California Jews and Jews of
the American West, told the luncheon guests that Diner had taught her to
seek "non-traditional sources" in addition to traditional ones when
writing histories. Among Diner's books, for example is Hungering for
America: Italian, Irish, and Jewish Foodways in their Age of Migration, for
which, among other sources, the professor pored over cookbooks as she conducted
her research.
Prof. Ellen Eisenberg of Willamette University, who has
written scholarly articles about the silence of the Jewish community when
Japanese-Americans were being sent to interment camps, said when structuring her
research she looked to such Diner works as In the Almost Promised Land:
American Jews and Blacks, 1915-1935.
Eisenberg credited Diner with influencing her in the belief that
American Jewish History must not be insular—that the experiences of Jews
should be evaluated within broader contexts. She noted that Diner has
written not only about the Jewish experience, but about those of other immigrant
groups, for example Erin's Daughters in America: Irish Immigrant Women in the
Nineteenth Century.
Prof. David Myers of UCLA, whose specialty is Modern Jewish History, said
that Diner has "introduced new rigor to American Jewish Historians"
while expanding "the pallet of colors" used by the historians in
painting their subjects. He noted that she draws upon articles in the
Yiddish press, in children's books, and recipes. Further, he said, Diner
recognizes the "transnational experience" in Jewish history—how the
lives of American Jews were affected not only by events and experiences on the
western side of the Atlantic Ocean but also on the eastern side. However,
he warned, "exceptionalism," the notion that the American Jewish
experience was an "exceptional" one, "besieges all our work, even
Hasia's."
Joshua Perelman, a doctoral candidate studying under Diner and also working at
the National Museum of American History in Philadelphia, said Diner as a
teacher "is not a teller, she encourages discovery." When
a friend turned in his first draft of a doctoral dissertation, Diner told him,
"let's pretend we don't know each other," and then discussed the
faults of his work in such a way that he walked out feeling really great,
Perelman said. As for himself, he is now completing a dissertation on
"left-wing American Jewish dancers," which he described as a
"journey" which Diner inspired him to take.
Responding briefly at lunch—as she was scheduled to be the dinner
speaker—Diner confessed that she is one who doesn't like attention directed at
her, who would "rather make a party for someone else." She said
that she did not know that American Jewish History would become her field; that,
when she was seeking direction as a graduate student, an advisor asked her if
she knew any "immigrant languages." Yiddish had been spoken in
her home, she replied. "It never dawned on me that would be the
entry point to the world which I aspired."
Since then she has become a proponent of the idea that "people should be
risk takers in scholarship; that there is no project not worth
studying." She recalled this attitude was in contrast to a senior
historian who, upon hearing she was working on a book dealing with food,
responded, "I thought you were a serious historian."
Having written books on a variety of subjects, she observed that she likes to
think of each new project as something to learn from the ground up, to learn de
novo. Furthermore, she said, she doesn't fret and urges her
students not to become stressed over whether their book will be perfect, or the
ultimate word on a subject. If that were possible, history would be
unbelievably boring. Better that a book by one scholar prompts books to be
written by other scholars "to prove that you're wrong."
Diner was more somber over dinner. Notwithstanding her efforts and those
of her colleagues, the purpose of studying American Jewish History still is not
well understood, neither by students nor by professors in other areas of
history, she said.
Jewish students often comprise a majority of those taking American Jewish
History classes and they sometimes mistakenly believe the purpose of the class
is to confirm their identities or "to make them better Jews," Diner
said. These students approach the class as if they are
"insiders," then are surprised to learn that "a class with me has
no connection to identity building." The professor told of a student eating
a bagel in class during Passover week who self-consciously apologized for
consuming a bread-rather than matzoh. Diner responded that she didn't like
students eating any food in class, but as to what he ate, she had
no preferences. This simply is outside the academic scope of their work.
The professor said she often has to correct Jewish students who use the
term "we," while discussing Jewish history. There is no
"we" in the class, except "we the students of this class want the
windows open," Diner said. She said she explains to her students that
"none of us are subjects of this study," and, furthermore, there are
students in the class who are not Jewish, so saying "we" tends to
exclude them. She asks the Jewish students to imagine that they were
taking a class on medieval history, in which Christians in the class started
saying "we," and Jews became marginalized.
Often, at the start of the term, non-Jewish students will say to her, 'you
probably are interested in why I take this class," to which she responds
that there is no need to explain. Furthermore, she asks, "Would you
say this to a botany professor?" It is not unusual for Christian
students to say, "I'm not Jewish but..." and Diner said she wonders
whether that is because in an American Jewish History class they feel like
interlopers or visitors rather than full participants.
Another situation that arises from time to time is when
students say they are taking the class because they come from multiple
backgrounds and want to sort out their identities. She said she tells such
students "maybe counseling would be a better place."
The Jewish community, said Diner, tends "to confuse Jewish studies with the
Jewish continuity program." This perhaps results from the fact that
many professors in Jewish studies sit in chairs endowed by members of the Jewish
community, "but we don't do it to advance a Jewish agenda," she
said. The historian's purpose is to discover facts and draw conclusions
from them, and sometimes those conclusions may cause a "certain degree of
discomfort."
For example, in her class one encounters the thesis that inasmuch as the United
States was a country where race was a formative issue, it was good fortune for
the Jewish immigrants that they were considered on the white side of the
line. And in a country that valued capitalism and making money, the
mercantile metiér of Jews was praised—whereas, in other countries, where
people scorned commercialism, Jews became objects of derision.
Students in her classes also are challenged by facts that contradict their
family's anecdotes, she said. They may have heard that their family left
Russia to escape the pogroms, but, in fact, most American immigrants came from
parts of Russia where there were no pogroms, she said.
Among professors of American History, said Diner, "without reading anything
we write" and regardless of how intellectually American Jewish Historians
may frame their questions, "we are considered to be parochial,
cheerleaders....We don't teach courses that they see as building blocks for
American history."
She told of complaining once to an NYU colleague that few students seemed to be
attracted to a course about the history of Jewish women in America.
The colleague responded, "Why don't you take 'Jewish' out?" The
colleague held the false view that it is possible to learn American History
without learning about American Jewish History, she said.
Not knowing that Jews have played an important role in American History is
like not knowing about Jews in the Labor Movement, she stated. Sometimes,
she said, she feels that to be accepted by American History colleagues,
researchers in American Jewish History are required to they are Americans.
There also are problems with Modern Jewish Historians, so much
so that American Jewish Historians consider themselves to
be stepchildren of Modern Jewish History. Notwithstanding the fact that
all of her graduate students are required to pass an examination in Yiddish—so
they can utilize numerous Jewish sources written in that language— American
Jewish History is seen as "easy." Unlike the Jews of Europe,
Jews in America did not speak multiple languages, and the borders of their
country didn't change.
She said she knows Modern Jewish Historians who believe falsely that anyone in
the department could teach American Jewish History, notwithstanding the fact
that "in other fields they recognize the fluidity of knowledge."
In this way, Modern Jewish Historians are not unlike Jewish students who
believe, falsely, that because they lived as American Jews, they therefore know
the subject matter.
Whereas Modern Jewish Historians focus on such political issues as oppression
and nationalism as determinative forces shaping the Jewish experience, they were
not the principal forces shaping the lives of American Jews. Perhaps because of
the differences in the subject matter, American Jewish Historians
"have turned to the social experience in a very creative way," she
said. For example, Diner and her colleagues have looked at class and
gender as important forces shaping the American Jewish experience.
Modern Jewish Historians tend to dismiss American Jewish History as being
"pale and derivative—Jewish History Lite," she said. These
colleagues believe falsely that American Jewish History is generally anecdotal
rather than analytic.
"Despite marginalization by American Historians and Modern Jewish
Historians, we have created a robust discipline," she declared.
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