David Shneer is associate professor of history and director of the Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Denver. Called a “taboo-breaking scholar” by Tikkun magazine and “a new Jewish superhero,” by Jewcy magazine, Shneer’s work concentrates on modern Jewish society and culture, especially Yiddish culture, Russian Jewish history, and Jews and sexuality. His books include Queer Jews, finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, Yiddish and the Creation of Soviet Jewish Culture, finalist for the National Jewish Book Award, and New Jews: The End of the Jewish Diaspora. His newest book project, tentatively titled Through Soviet Jewish Eyes: Photography, War, and the Holocaust, looks at the lives and works of two dozen World War II military photographers to examine what kinds of photographs Soviet Jewish photographers took when they encountered evidence of Nazi genocide on the Eastern Front. He has lived and worked as a scholar and writer in Russia, Germany and Israel and has written for the Rocky Mountain News and the Denver Post as well as magazines dedicated to Jewish life and culture, including Pakntreger, Jewcy, and Nextbook. Shneer has taught or been a scholar-in-residence at the University of California campuses at Berkeley and Davis, and at the University of Ilinois, the National Yiddish Book Center, the University of Wisconsin, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, and the Graduate Theological Union.

Blog Entries by David Shneer

Why I'm Not Getting Married ... Again

Posted July 3, 2008 | 05:33 PM (EST)


Twelve years ago, on June 23, 1996, my husband (sic) and I got married under a Jewish wedding canopy, known as a huppah, surrounded by 120 friends and family in the hills above Berkeley, California. It was a perfect day of singing, celebration, and in quintessential California fashion, organic food...

Read Post

Baby's First Holocaust Memorial:Taking My Daughter to the Berlin Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

Posted July 1, 2007 | 12:15 PM (EST)


It's not exactly where one would think of taking his 18-month-old daughter. I'm doing work from Berlin for a week and am here with the whole family, which means that when I'm not working, I am spending time with family seeing the city. My daughter and I had the afternoon...

Read Post

Surrealism as a Way of Life: Driving Route 443 Through The West Bank

Posted June 17, 2007 | 07:50 PM (EST)


It was almost a normal weekend. A group of friends traveled to the north of Israel for a weekend of relaxation. True, we stayed at a "tsimer," the Israeli form of a bed and breakfast located in the Golan Heights, a piece of land that may be given back to...

Read Post

40 Years And Still Shrugging

Posted June 11, 2007 | 12:19 PM (EST)


"If I weren't so busy filming, I think I'd be crying," said long time Israeli peace activist and filmmaker Paula Kelman, who accompanied me to a sparse commemoration/performance/peace rally on the fortieth anniversary of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the other territories taken in the Six-Day War...

Read Post