Mika Ahuvia
Project Description
Marsha and Jay Glazer Endowed Chair in Jewish Studies, Assistant Professor, Jackson School of International Studies
Ph.D. Princeton University (2014)
Contact Information: E-mail: mahuvia@uw.edu Phone: 206-685-0891 Office: Thomson 224 Office Hours: Change quarterly, contact for appointment |
More Information: CV |
Faculty Profile
Mika Ahuvia was born in Kibbutz Beit Hashita in northern Israel. She researches the formative history of Jewish and Christian communities in the ancient Mediterranean world. Specializing in Late Antique Jewish history, she works with rabbinic sources, liturgical poetry, magical texts, early mystical literature, and archaeological evidence. Her forthcoming book investigates conceptions of angels in foundational Jewish texts and ritual sources. She uncovers how angels made their way into the practices and worldview of ancient Jews and makes sense of why angels continue to play such an important role within and outside of institutional religious settings. She teaches courses in Jewish Studies, comparative religion, and global studies in the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies and is also the Stroum Center’s Undergraduate Program Coordinator.
Public Scholarship
- Us vs. them: Challenging stereotypes about Judaism in the wake of Pittsburgh shooting (2018)
- Reading the Rabbis in the Age of #MeToo (2018, Feminist Studies in Religion)
- Jewish Queens: From the Story of Esther to the History of Shelamzion (2017, Torah.com)
- An Ancient Jewess Invoking Goddesses: Transgression or Pious Adaptation? (2017, Perspectives Magazine)
- A Jewish Historian’s Plea for Global Refugees (2015)