Zev Garber is an American academic. He is Professor Emeritus and Chair of Jewish Studies at Los Angeles Valley College, and the editor of Shofar, a peer-reviewed academic journal of Jewish Studies. He is the former president of the National Association of Professors of Hebrew. He was the subject of a Festschrift in 2009.
Early life and education
Garber was born into a Jewish family and attended Bar-Ilan University in Israel,[1] and he graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in Hebrew from Hunter College.[2] He studied Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac, Ugaritic at UCLA graduate school. He earned a master of arts degree and completed his course work for PhD in Religion at the University of Southern California.[2][3]
Career
Garber started his career as a Hebrew teacher at the Los Angeles Hebrew High School.[2]
Garber joined the faculty at Los Angeles Valley College in 1970.[2][4] Within a year, he established a Jewish Studies major.[4] As of 2016, he is Professor Emeritus and Chair of Jewish Studies.[5][6][7] He was the Visiting Rosenthal Professor of Judaic Studies at Case Western Reserve University in 2005.[4] He taught Jewish studies at the University of California at Riverside and at the American Jewish University.
Garber has been the co-editor and later editor of Shofar since 1994.[4][8] He served as the President of the National Association of Professors of Hebrew,[4] where he still serves as an officer.[9] He has been the editor of Iggeret, the newsletter of the NAPH, since 1984.[10]
Garber established the first Jewish Studies program in a public school of higher learning in the State of California at Los Angeles Valley College (1971). He is recognized as a pioneer of Jewish Studies at two-year public colleges. His scholarship embraces Jewish Studies pedagogy, Shoah theology, Jewish Jesus, and interfaith dialogue. His (and Bruce Zuckerman) advocacy of Shoah not Holocaust as the term of record for the murder of European Jewry during WW II, presented at the Oxford Conference ("Remembering for the Future," 10–13 July 1988) was among the first to advocate careful terminology to describe the Jewish genocide.[11]
Garber, published author and presenter of hundreds of academic articles and reviews, was the subject of a Festschrift edited by Steven L. Jacobs entitled Maven in Blue Jeans: A Festschrift in Honor of Zev Garber in 2009.[12]
Publications
Garber, Zev (1986). Methodology in the Academic Teaching of Judaism. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780819157249. OCLC14272763.
Berger, Alan L.; Garber, Zev; Libowitz, Richard (1988). Methodology in the Academic Teaching of the Holocaust. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780819169617. OCLC17649643.
Garber, Zev (1991). Teaching Hebrew Language and Literature at the College Level.
Garber, Zev (1994). Shoah: The Paradigmatic Genocide: Essays in Exegesis and Eisegesis. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780819196583. OCLC30734284.
Berenbaum, Michael; Rubenstein, Betty Rogers, eds. (1995). What Kind of God? Essays in Honor of Richard L. Rubenstein. Consulting editors: Rubenstein Feibel, Hannah; Garber, Susan; Garber, Zev. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780761800361. OCLC32780110.
Cargas, Harry J.; Garber, Zev; Libowitz, Richard (1998). Peace, In Deed: Essays in Honor of Harry James Cargas. Atlanta, Georgia: Scholars Press. ISBN9780788504976. OCLC39763342.
Garber, Zev (2000). Academic Approaches to Teaching Jewish Studies. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780761815525. OCLC42475906.
Jacobs, Steven; Knight, Henry; Garber, Zev (2004). Moore, James (ed.). Post-Shoah Dialogues: Re-Thinking our Texts Together. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780761828372. OCLC55142963.
Garber, Zev; Zuckerman, Bruce (2004). Double Takes: Thinking and Rethinking Issues of Modern Judaism in Ancient Contexts. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN9780761828945. OCLC56680883.
Garber, Zev, ed. (2006). Mel Gibson's Passion: The Film, the Controversy, and Its Implications. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN9781557534057. OCLC61821761.
Ansell, Lisa; Garber, Zev; Schoenberg, Jeremy; Zuckerman, Bruce (2008). The Impact of the Holocaust in America. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN9781557535344. OCLC286532454.
Garber, Zev (2011). The Jewish Jesus: Revelation, Reflection, Reclamation. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN9781557535795. OCLC670480801.
Garber, Zev (2015). Teaching the Historical Jesus: Issues and Exegesis. New York: Routledge. ISBN9781138794610. OCLC886382164.
Garber, Zev, Hakak, Lev, Katz, Shmuel, eds., (2017). The Maskil in Our Time:Studies in Honor of Moshe Pelli.Israel: Hakibutz Hameuchad Publishing House. ISBN978-965-020-837-0. Hebrew and English.
Garber, Zev and Hanson, Kenneth, Judaism and Jesus (2020), Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK ISBN978-1-5275-4129-0
Garber, Zev and Hanson, Kenneth, "The Annotated Passover Haggadah" (2021), GCRR Press, Denver, CO (ISBN978-1-7362739-2-0)
Garber, Zev and Hanson, Kenneth,"Teaching the Shoah:Mandate and Momentum" (2023), Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyre, UK (ISBN1-5275-9120-4)
^Sabbath, Roberta (2010). "Historiosophy and Zev Garber, A Neologism: His Teaching Methodology, Literary Investigations, and Engagement with Zionism". Hebrew Studies. 51: 359–362. doi:10.1353/hbr.2010.a400593. JSTOR27913979. S2CID170997346.
^"Officers". National Association of Professors of Hebrew. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
^"Zev Garber". Los Angeles Valley College. Retrieved July 3, 2016.