Marjorie Lehman

Professor of Talmud and Rabbinics

Department: Talmud and Rabbinics

Phone: (212) 280-6127

Email: malehman@jtsa.edu

Building Room: Unterberg 308

Office Hours: By Appointment

Biography

BA, Wellesley College; MA, MPhil, and PhD, Columbia University

Dr. Marjorie Lehman is professor of Talmud and Rabbinics at 91辦畦 and the Area Coordinator of Rabbinic Literatures and Cultures. She teaches a wide range of courses in Rabbinics, including courses on gender in Talmudic literature, aggadah, halakhah, the history of the Jewish book, and pedagogy. Her scholarly journey reflects a commitment to balancing the historical and intellectual aspects of Jewish texts while also focusing on the ways they speak to and help us to understand our place in the contemporary moment.

Dr. Lehmans first book, The En Yaaqov: Jacob ibn Habibs Search for Faith in the Talmudic Corpus (Wayne State University Press, 2012) reflects her interest both in the study of Talmudic aggadah and also in the concept of studying a complete literary workin this case the early sixteenth century collection, the En Yaaqov. Building on this interest and integrating it with her interest in gender in rabbinic literature, she explored the Babylonian tractate, Yoma, as one cultural unit of study. This book, Bringing Down the Temple House: Engendering Tractate Yoma was published (Brandeis University Press) in 2022. With a staunch commitment to collaborative work, Dr. Lehman has co-edited two books, Mothers in the Jewish Cultural Imagination with Jane Kanarek and Simon Bronner (Liverpool: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization at Liverpool University Press, 2017) and Learning to Read Talmud: What it Looks Like and How It Happens with Jane Kanarek.

Dr. Lehman joins Michelle Margolis (Norman E. Alexander Librarian for Jewish Studies at Columbia University), Adam Shear (University of Pittsburgh), and Joshua Teplitsky (University of Pennsylvania) as a co-director of an internationally renowned digital humanities project in Jewish Studies called FFootprints tracks the global movement of copies of Jewish books since the inception of print. Itoffers scholars the opportunity to think about the way a book becomes personalized by paying careful attention to the marks individuals leave on its physical form including its owners signatures, censors marks, marginalia, and the mementoes pasted between its leaves. It brings to the humanities a new approach to studying history that considers book ownership as able to offer insight into the complexity of Jewish life and culture.

Deeply committed to the training of individuals in Judaica librarianship, Dr. Lehman represents the 91辦畦 faculty in the launch of a certificate program jointly conceived and overseen by 91辦畦 and the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL). She joins Naomi Steinberger (91辦畦 Director of Library services), Michelle Margolis (President of the AJL), and Jeremiah Aaron Taub (AJL and Head of the Israel and Judaica Section at the Library of Congress) in this endeavor. She is grateful to the Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program for their support of this groundbreaking initiative. This certificate is designed to respond to a pressing need for specialized expertise in Judaica and Hebraica collections. It equips library and archival professionals with the skills necessary to serve diverse communities across the United States and beyond ().

As a committed teacher, Dr. Lehman pays great attention to pedagogy and has collaborated on research with members of 91辦畦’s Jewish Education faculty and has conducted workshops in conjunction with the Mandel Center for Studies in Jewish Education at Brandeis University. She was a rabbinics advisor at the Frankel Jewish Academy in West Bloomfield, Michigan and at the Gesher Jewish Day School in Fairfax, Virginia.

Dr.泭 Lehman has published articles in the泭Jewish Studies Quarterly,泭Nashim,泭AJS Review, the泭Journal of Teaching Theology and Religion泭and the泭Journal of Textual Reasoning, and she has lectured and presented scholarly papers at many conferences throughout the United States, Europe, and Israel. She has been awarded fellowships and served as a visiting scholar at several institutions. She has served on the泭Academic advisory board of the Center for Jewish History. She serves on the advisory boards of the Program Committee of the Association for Jewish Studies, Center for Jewish Studies, the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan, and the board of trustees at the Ramaz School in NYC.

GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS, AND AWARDS

  • NYU School of Law, Ivan Berkowitz Fellow 20232024
  • University of Pennsylvania, The Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, Fellow (Fall 2019)
  • University of Pennsylvania/Stanford University, Fellow (Summer 2015)
    • Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Jewish Studies and the Taube Center for Jewish Studies, Stanford University
    • Project: Feminist Hermeneutics and the Babylonian Talmud
  • Brandeis University, Mandel Center for Studies in Jewish Education, Affiliated Scholar
    • 20132014, Project: Learning to Read Talmud
    • 20162017, Workshop on Talmud and Pedagogy
  • University of Michigan, Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, Fellow (Spring 2014)
  • Wabash Fellow, 91辦畦
    • 20122013, Teaching Mentor to Graduate Students
    • 20082009, Grant issued by the Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion to study teaching at 91辦畦

Publications

Books and Edited Volumes

  • co-author Mira Wasserman,泭Sources. Spring 2025.
  • Bringing Down the Temple House: Engendering Tractate Yoma (Brandeis University Press, 2022)
  • Mothers in the Jewish Cultural Imagination. Co-editors: Marjorie Lehman, Jane Kanarek and Simon Bronner. Liverpool: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization at Liverpool University Press, 2017. The book was a finalist for the 2017 National Jewish Book Award in the category of Womens Studies.
  • Learning to Read Talmud: What it Looks Like and How It Happens. Co-editors: Marjorie Lehman and Jane L. Kanarek. Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2016. The volume was a finalist for the 2017 National Jewish Book Award in the category of Education and Jewish Identity.
  • The En Yaaqov: Jacob ibn Habibs Search for Faith in the Talmudic Corpus. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2012 was a finalist for the 2012 National Jewish Book AwardNahum M. Sarna Memorial Award in the Scholarship category.
  • Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues. 28 (2015) in honor of Judith Hauptman. Co-editors: Charlotte Fonrobert, Jane Kanarek and Marjorie Lehman.

Articles

  • T堯梗 Ethical Implications of Underreading Rabbinic Sources on Slavery, with Mira Wasserman (Journal of Jewish Ethics, forthcoming)
  • Echoing Yehudit: Dirshuni as a Womens Collective Enterprise, co-author Chaya Halberstam,泭Journal of Textual Reasoning泭16:1 (2025).泭
  • Footprints: A Digital Approach to (Jewish) Book History.泭European Journal of Jewish Studies泭17 (2023), 1-30. co-authors Michelle Margolis, Adam Shear, and Josh Teplitsky.
  • T堯梗 Student as Ethical Prompt: Reading Virginity Claims in Tractate Ketubot,泭Jewish Textual Reasoning, 15:1 (2023), 182-204.
  • Anna Whistler and the Talmudic Mothers of Yerushalmi Kiddushin,泭Making History: Studies in Rabbinic History, Literature, and Culture in Honor of Richard L. Kalmin. Eds. Alyssa Gray and Carol Bakhos, Providence: Brown Judaica Series, 2023.
  • Who Gets a Voice at the Table?: Eating and Blessing with Rav Na廎叮an泭 (New York: 91辦畦 Press, 2020). Festschrift honoring Joel Roths retirement; eds. Robbie Harris and Jonathan Milgram.
  • T堯梗 Priesthood in the Rabbinic Imagination and the Prohibition against Wearing Shoes on Yom Kippur. 泭AJS Review 44:2 (2019), 319-338. This is one article in a collection of articles on the Temple that emerged from a seminar I co-convened with Hayim Lapin at the AJS.
  • . Journal of Textual Reasoning 10:1 (2018).
  • Old Texts and New Media: Jewish Books on the Move and a Case for Collaboration. 泭In Digital Humanities, Libraries, and Partnerships. Eds. Kate Joranson and Robin Kear.泭 Chandos Elsevier, (March 2018), with Michelle Chesner, Adam Shear and Josh Teplitsky.
  • Reading Beruriah through the Lens of Isaac Bashevis Singers Yentl. Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues. 31:1 (2017): 123-145.
  • And No One Gave the Torah to the Priests: Learning to Read the Mishnah through the Lens of the Priests and the Temple. 泭In Learning to Read Talmud: What it Looks Like and How it Happens. Eds. Jane Kanarek and Marjorie Lehman. Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2016, 85-116.
  • Making Choices: Yom Kippur is Upon Us, What Text Should I Teach? 泭Gleanings: Dialogue on Jewish Education from the Davidson School. 2:4 (2015).
  • Rabbinic Masculinities: Reading the Baal Keri in Tractate Yoma. 泭Jewish Studies Quarterly 22 (2015): 109-36.
  • Imagining the Priesthood in Tractate Yoma: and. 泭Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues. 28 (2015): 88-105.
  • Teaching to, with and against Faith. 泭Teaching Theology and Religion. 18:4 (2015): 363-386.
  • Dressing and Undressing the High Priest: A Talmudic View of Mothers. 泭Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues 26 (2014): 52-74.
  • Assigning Integration: A Framework for Intellectual, Personal, and Professional Development in Seminary Courses. Teaching Theology and Religion 16:1 (2012), 18-32. Co-author, Jane Kanarek.
  • Reading the Gendered Rhetoric of Yom Kippur. 泭In Introduction to Seder Qodashim, Eds., Tal Ilan, Monika Brockhaus, and Tanja Hidde. Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2012, 33-56.
  • Levisohns Orientations: A Response from the Classroom. Journal of Jewish Education 76 (2010): 117-119.
  • Reimagining Home, Rethinking Sukkah: Rabbinic Discourse and its Contemporary Implications. 泭In Jews at Home: The Domestication of Identity. Ed., Simon J. Bronner. Oxford: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2009, 107-139.
  • Making a Case for Rabbinic Pedagogy. 泭In The International Handbook of Jewish Education. Eds. Lisa Grant and Alex Pomson, 581-596. New York: Springer, 2011 (co-author, Jane Kanarek).
  • T堯梗 Gendered Rhetoric of Sukkah Observance. 泭Jewish Quarterly Review 96:3 (2006): 309-335.
  • Examining the Role of Gender Studies in the Teaching of Talmudic Literature. 泭Journal of Jewish Education 72:2 (2006): 109-121.
  • T堯梗 Babylonian Talmud in Cognitive Perspective: Reflections on the Nature of the Bavli and its Pedagogical Implications. 泭Journal of Jewish Education, 69:2 (2003): 58-78.
  • Dialogue and ‘Distance’: Cognitive-Developmental Theories and the Teaching of Talmud. Jewish Education News, Spring 2004 (co-author, Jeffrey Kress).
  • Women and Passover Observance: Reconsidering Gender in the Study of Rabbinic Texts. Studies in Jewish Civilization 14 (2003): 45-66.
  • For the Love of Talmud: Reflections on the Study of Bava Metzia, Perek 2. The Journal of Jewish Education, 68:1 (2002): 87-103.
  • T堯梗 Ein Yaakov: A Collection of Aggadah in Transition. 泭Prooftexts 19:2 (1999): 21-40.

Book Reviews

  • Book Review: Jews, Gentiles, and Other Animals: The Talmud after the Humanities. Mira Beth Wasserman, Journal of Religious History (December Special Issue). 43:1 (2019).
  • Book Review: Rabbinic Tales of Destruction: Gender, Sex and Disability in the Ruins of Jerusalem by Julia Watts Belser. Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues. 34 (2019): 189-192.
  • Book Review: Tractates Tamid, Middot, Qinnim by Dalia Marx. Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Womens Studies and Gender Issues. 27 (2014): 178-181.
  • Book Review: Rereading the Rabbis by Judith Hauptman. Prooftexts 19:3 (1999): 292-98.

Blogposts; Online and Magazine Articles

  • Women and Talmud Study: An Unfinished Story. AJS Perspectives (forthcoming, Fall 2020).
  • . In Library Exhibitions from the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, The Jewish Home: Dwelling on the Domestic, the Familial, and the Lived-In, 2020.
  • . Medaon: Magazin f羹r j羹disches Leben in Forschung und Bildung. 12: (2018) (co-authors Michelle Chesner, Joshua Teplitsky and Adam Shear).
  • Teaching with Footprints: Integrating Digital Humanities Projects into Our Courses.泭AJS Newsletter, Fall 2016
  • . 泭September 2016 (Editor: Shai Secunda)
  • . June 2016
  • . September 2015. Marjorie Lehman and Charlotte Fonrobert, co-authors
  • . 泭September 2015
  • Reenacting Ancient Pedagogy in the Classroom.泭 Spotlight on Theological Education: American Academy of Religion 2:1 (2008): 3.