KEN KOLTUN-FROMM
Department of Religion,
Haverford College, 370 Lancaster Ave, Haverford, PA 19041
♦
(610) 896-1026 office / (610) 645-8324 home / (610)
896-4926 fax ♦
kkoltunf@haverford.edu
Education
Ph.D., Religious Studies, Stanford University, 1997
M.A., Stanford University, 1994
M.T.S., Harvard Divinity School, 1991
B.A., Religion, Haverford College, 1988
Current
Position
Associate Professor of Religion, Haverford College, 2004
Employment
Assistant Professor of Religion, Haverford College,
1997-2004
Visiting Instructor, Tulane University, 1996-7
Adjunct Instructor, Stanford University, 1996
Adjunct Instructor, Tulane University, 1995
Lecturer, Santa Clara University, 1993
Awards
Mellon New Directions Fellowship, 2005-2006
Faculty Research Grant, Haverford College, 2004
Faculty Research Grant, Haverford College, 2002
Koret Foundation Book Award for Moses Hess and Modern
Jewish Identity, 2001
Skirball Visiting Fellowship, Oxford Centre for Hebrew and
Jewish Studies, 2000
Memorial Foundation For Jewish Culture Grant, 2000-2001
DAAD Scholarship, Language Study in Germany, 2000
Koret Jewish Studies Publications Program Grant, 2000
Faculty Research Grant, Haverford College, 2000
Faculty Research Grant, Haverford College, 1999
Newhouse Foundation Grant, Stanford University, 1997
Memorial Foundation Grant for doctoral research, 1997
Department Fellowship, Stanford University, 1996-7
Newhouse Foundation Summer Grant, Israel, 1996
Dorot Foundation Summer Grant, Israel, 1996
Fulbright Scholarship for doctoral research, Israel,
1994-95
Interuniversity Fellowship for doctoral research, Israel,
1994-95
Koret Foundation Summer Grant, Israel, 1992
Department Fellowship, Stanford University, 1991-94
Phi Beta Kappa, Haverford College, 1988
Highest honors in Religion, Haverford College, 1988
Publications
“Abraham Geiger’s Attitude about the Place and
Status of Women in Judaism,” in Jewish Women: A
Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia (Jerusalem: Shalvi
Publishing, 2006), forthcoming 2006
Abraham Geiger’s Liberal Judaism: Personal
Meaning and Religious Authority (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 2006)
“The Politics of Religion in the Thought of Samuel
Holdheim,” in Re-Defining Judaism in an Age of
Emancipation: Comparative Perspectives on Samuel Holdheim
(Leiden: Brill), forthcoming
Moses Hess and Modern Jewish Identity
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001) -- Winner of
the Koret Foundation Book Award in Jewish Thought and
Philosophy, 2001
“Imagining Moses: The Burden and Blessing of Reading
Freud’s Moses and Monotheism,” in Jewish Book
Council, Vol. 55/56 Year 1997-1999, ed. Avi Bernstein-Nahar
(New York: Jewish Book Council, 2001), pp. 62-87
Review Essay: Lenn Goodman, Judaism, Human Rights, and
Human Values (New York and Oxford, Oxford University Press,
1998); David Novak, Covenantal Rights: A Study in Jewish
Political Theory, (Princeton, Princeton University Press,
2000), Jewish Political Studies Review 13/1-2 (2001), pp.
263-278
“Historical Memory in Abraham Geiger’s Account
of Modern Jewish Identity,” Jewish Social Studies 7/1
(2000), pp. 109-126
“A Narrative Reading of Moses Hess’s Return to
Judaism,” Modern Judaism 19 (1999), pp. 41-65
“Public Religion in Samson Raphael Hirsch and Samuel
Hirsch’s Interpretation of Religious
Symbolism,” Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy,
9 (1999), pp. 69-105
Book
Reviews
Elliot Dorff, The Unfolding Tradition: Jewish Law After
Sinai (Aviv Press, New York, 2005), Sh’ma
(forthcoming in February, 2006)
Jonathan Hess, Germans, Jews and the Claims of Modernity
(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002),
Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte/Journal for the
History of Modern Theology 11/2 (2004), pp. 306-308
Julia Epstein and Lori Hope Lefkovitz, eds. Shaping Losses:
Cultural Memory and the Holocaust (Urbana and Chicago:
University of Illinois Press, 2001), Biography 26/1 (2003),
151-153
Michael Meyer, Judaism within Modernity: Essays on Jewish
History and Religion (Detroit: Wayne State University
Press, 2001), Religious Studies Review,
Louis Newman, Past Imperatives: Studies in the History and
Theory of Jewish Ethics (Albany: State University of New
York Press, 1998), Religious Studies Review,
Steven Nadler, Spinoza: A Life (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1999), Religious Studies Review, 26/4
(2000), p. 390
Lenn Goodman, Judaism, Human Rights, and Human Values (New
York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998), Religious
Studies Review, 26/1 (2000), p. 99
Rachel Adler, Engendering Judaism: An Inclusive Theology
and Ethics (Philadelphia and Jerusalem: The Jewish
Publication Society, 1998), Religious Studies Review, 25/2
(1999), p. 203
Papers
Presented
“Mordecai Kaplan’s Civilization as Aesthetic
Performance,” Association for Jewish Studies,
Washington, D.C, December 20, 2005
“The Art of Writing: The Diaries of Mordecai
Kaplan,” American Academy of Religion, Philadelphia,
November 22, 2005
“Reading Practices and Religious Authority: Abraham
Geiger's Biblical Criticism and the Study of
Judaism,” American Academy of Religion Conference,
San Antonio, November 22, 2004
“Writing Nineteenth Century Wrongs: A
Response,” Association of Jewish Studies Conference,
Boston, December 23, 2003
“What Traditions Do: Abraham Geiger, George Lindbeck
and the Meaning of Liberalism,” Association of Jewish
Studies Conference, Washington, December 16, 2001
“The Bible as Struggle: Abraham Geiger's Reading of
Origins, Traditions, and Sacred Texts,” Southampton
University, Southampton, England, April 24, 2001
“The Politics of Religion in the Thought of Samuel
Holdheim,” Samuel Holdheim (1806-1860): Reformer oder
Häretiker? Leben, Werk und Wirken, Nettetal, Germany, April
17-20, 2001
“Gendered Identities and the Public Sphere in Abraham
Geiger’s Biblical Exegesis,” Association of
Jewish Studies Conference, Chicago, December 21, 1999
“Identity, Religion, and Election in Abraham
Geiger’s Judaism and its History," Association of
Jewish Studies Conference, Boston, December 20, 1998
“Identity in Modern Jewish Thought,” Beth
Hillel/Beth El, October 31, 1998
“The Roots of Modern Jewish Identity,” Main
Line Reform Temple, March 22, 1998
“Transcendental Argument, Narrative Identity, and
Hess’s Rome and Jerusalem,” Association of
Jewish Studies Conference, Boston, December 22, 1997
“Moses Hess’s ‘Return’ to Judaism:
Problems in Jewish National and Religious Identity,”
Political Dimensions in Modern Jewish Thought: Conference
of the Center for Judaic Studies, Boston University,
October 26-27, 1997
“Identity, Tradition, and Lost Innocence in
Hess’s Rome and Jerusalem,” Graduate Student
Conference on Modern Jewish Thought, History, and
Literature; Harvard Center for Jewish Studies, April 7,
1997
“Emotive Responses and Religious Goods: Moses
Hess’s critique of Jewish Identity,”
Association of Jewish Studies Conference, Boston, December
18, 1995
Committee Assignments
Humanities Center Steering Committee, 2004-2005
Ad Hoc Search Committee, Director of Facilities Management,
2003-2004
Administrative Advisory Committee, 2001-2005
College Planning Committee, 2001-2003, 2004-2005
Ad Hoc Search Committee, History, 1998-99
Courses
101b - Introduction to the Study of Religion
120a - Introduction to Jewish Thought
120a – Jewish Thought and Identity
128b – Reading Sacred Texts
130b - Material Religion in America
246b - Contemporary Jewish Thought
280a - Ethics and the Good Life
281a - Modern Jewish Thought
284a – American Judaism
305a – Concentration Seminar
349a – Seminar in Modern Jewish Thought
398a – Theories and Methods in the Study of Religion
399b – Senior Seminar and Thesis
648 – Topics in Modern Jewish Thought (Temple
University)