Jewish Quarterly Review

** Scroll down to find JQR blog posts **

The Jewish Quarterly Review was established by Israel Abrahams and Claude Montefiore in 1889, and migrated from England to Philadelphia in 1910, where its publication resumed under the editorship of Cyrus Adler and Solomon Schechter. It remains the oldest English-language journal in the field of Jewish studies. JQR preserves the attention to textual detail so characteristic of the journal's early years, while encouraging scholarship in a wide range of fields and time periods. In each quarterly issue of JQR, the ancient stands alongside the modern, the historical alongside the literary, the textual alongside the contextual.

Recent issues are available online through Project Muse, and to access 130 years of JQR, you can find our full archive digitized at JSTOR.

For instructions on how to submit an essay click here, and to subscribe, visit jqr.pennpress.org.

Editors: Natalie B. Dohrmann & David N. Myers
Executive Editor: Anne Oravetz Albert
Journal Manager: Adrienne Atkins
Editorial Board: Mira Balberg, Elisheva Baumgarten, Beth Berkowitz, Daniel Boyarin, Francesca Bregoli, Richard I. Cohen, Daniel Frank, Miriam Goldstein, Liora R. Halperin, Warren Zev Harvey, Sarah Imhoff, Martin Kavka, Y. Tzvi Langermann, Eric Lawee, Lisa Leff, Vivian Liska, Shaul Magid, Jessica Marglin, Kenneth B. Moss, David B. Ruderman, Daniel R. Schwartz, Edwin Seroussi, Joanna Weinberg, Steven Phillip Weitzman, Beth Wenger, Elliot R. Wolfson, Sunny Yudkoff, Irene Zwiep

 

Back To Blog
Dec
9
December 09, 2016
Jewish Quarterly Review
The Case for "Assimilation" and Diaspora
by
The Jewish Quarterly Review
Dec
8
December 08, 2016
Sep
23
September 23, 2016
Mar
13
March 13, 2016
Jewish Quarterly Review
Notes on Notes
by
The Jewish Quarterly Review
Jun
8
June 08, 2015
Jewish Quarterly Review
Aviva Ben-Ur’s “Kabbalistic Pharmacopeia”
by
The Jewish Quarterly Review
May
27
May 27, 2015
Jewish Quarterly Review
The Fighting Faith of Solomon Schechter
by
David B. Starr
Apr
15
April 15, 2015
Jewish Quarterly Review
Three Generations of Judaic Scholarship
by
Elliott Horowitz