Indiana University Bloomington

Jewish Studies student Wendy Fergusson
Jewish Studies student Wendy Fergusson was featured on the cover of Biblical Archaeology Review working at the Beth-Shemesh dig 16 miles southwest of Jerusalem. Photo: Zvi Lederman

The Robert A. and Sandra S. Borns Jewish Studies Program at Indiana University is an interdepartmental program. Our faculty are housed in various departments — including Anthropology, Comparative Literature, English, Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Germanic Studies, History, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, Philosophy, Religious Studies, and the Russian and East European Institute — where students pursue master's or doctoral degrees. The Borns Jewish Studies Program does not offer a master's degree or doctoral degree program, but students enrolled in Indiana University Bloomington doctoral programs may pursue a doctoral minor in Jewish Studies.

Students interested in graduate study need to apply for admission through the various departments listed above rather than through the Borns Jewish Studies Program.

Graduate Fellowship Opportunities

The Borns Jewish Studies Program provides numerous opportunities for graduate students working in different disciplines to interact and learn from each other through the Jewish Studies workshop series and other programs. The JSP also provides extensive fellowship opportunities and other awards for students working in Jewish Studies.

 

GRANTS-IN-AID OF RESEARCH

 

Jewish Studies Graduate Level Courses:

Jewish Studies Course Information, Spring 2009

Crosslisted Graduate Jewish Studies courses by department

Reading Yiddish for Holocaust Research

Jewish Studies Academic Programs for Graduate Students:

Ph.D. minor in Jewish Studies

Doctoral Minor in Yiddish Studies

Resources for graduate students:

Graduate School Bulletin

Read quotes from alumni of Borns Jewish Studies graduate programs.