Yoav Rinon is a professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Department of Classics at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem.
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He trained in both fields at the Hebrew University where he received his Ph.D. His scholarly work reflects the integration of these complementary disciplines, focusing on questions of ethics and poetics. His publications include: The World of the Marquis de Sade, Homer and the Dual Model of the Tragic, a verse translation of and commentary (with Luisa Ferretti-Cuomo ) on Dante's Inferno (in Hebrew), and The Crisis in the Humanities (in Hebrew). He is now working on a book on questions of identity in the work of Walter Benjamin.
I am a doctoral candidate in the Department of General and Comparative Literature and a member of the PhD honors program at the the Mandel School for Advanced Studies in the Humanities.
Holds a bachelor's degree in classical studies from Tel Aviv University, and a master's and doctoral degree from the University of Geneva in Switzerland (Russian studies and comparative literature).
David Fishelov is Professor of Comparative Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He got his BA in Poetics and Comparative Literature and in Philosophy from Tel Aviv University, his MA in Poetics and Comparative Literature from Tel Aviv University and his Ph.D.
Shachar Livne is a PhD Candidate in the General and Comparative Literature Department and a Doctoral Fellow at the Mandel School for Advanced Studies in the Humanities.
Betty Rojtman, Professor Emerita at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, taught in the Department of French Studies and the Department of General and Comparative Literature, where she held the Katherine Cornell Chair.
Professor Moshe Ron (b. Tel Aviv, 1945), B.A. in Romance Languages and English Literature from Hebrew University (1968), Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Yale University (1975, dissertation directed by Paul de Man).
Gur Zak (PhD Toronto 2008), is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Romance Studies and Academic Head of the Institute of Literatures.
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His research concentrates on the interrelations of ethics, literature, and the emotions in the later Middle Ages and the Italian Renaissance, with a particular emphasis on the writings of the “Three Crowns”: Dante, Petrarca, and Boccaccio. He is the author of the monographs Petrarch’s Humanism and the Care of the Self (Cambridge, 2010) and Boccaccio and the Consolation of Literature (Toronto, 2022), and co-editor of several volumes, including Petrarchan Passions: Affects and Community Formation in the Renaissance World (with B. Huss and T. Kircher, Berlin, 2022). He is also the editor and co-translator of the volume Wandering to Other Times: Francesco Petrarca, Selected Writings (Jerusalem, 2023), the first translation of Petrarch’s Latin works into Hebrew. His articles have appeared in journals such as Speculum, Modern Language Notes, I Tatti Studies, and Mediaevalia. His current research project deals with the literary shaping of the emotions of compassion, envy, anger, and forgiveness in the turn from the later Middle Ages to the Early Modern Period.
Tzachi Zamir is a philosopher and a literary critic (Assoc. Prof. English & Comp. Lit). Zamir is the author of Double Vision: Moral Philosophy and Shakespearean Drama (Princeton, 2006), Ethics and the Beast (Princeton, 2007), and Acts: Theater, Philosophy and the Performing Self (The University of Michigan Press, 2014).
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He is currently editing a collection of articles on Hamlet and philosophy for Oxford University Press and has recently completed a manuscript offering a philosophical reading of Milton's Paradise Lost.
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