David Biale

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  • Stanford University

David Biale was the Emanuel Ringelblum Distinguished Professor of Jewish History at the University of California, Davis. He was founding director of the campus’s program in Jewish studies and led the program for many years. He also directed its Humanities Institute for three years, and chaired the Department of History for four years. Earlier in his career, Biale was on the history faculty at SUNY Binghamton (1977 to 1986) and led its Judaic Studies Program. He left Binghamton for the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California and was named Koret Professor of Jewish History and director of GTU’s (now Richard S. Dinner) Center for Jewish Studies. He was the author or editor of thirteen books on Jewish intellectual, religious and cultural history.

Biale’s first book, which grew out of his dissertation, was a study of the philosophy of history of Gershom Scholem (Gershom Scholem: Kabbalah and Counter-History, 1979, Harvard University Press; recipient of the 1981 Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities. See also Biale’s remembrance of Scholem in the Jewish Review of Books, “My Path in Jewish Studies: Memoirs of a Counter-Historian,” Fall 2023). His next published work was a book-length essay on Jewish political history, Power and Powerlessness in Jewish History (1986, Schocken Books). A third monograph, Eros and the Jews (1997, University of California Press), examined issues of sexuality, gender and marriage from the Bible through the Talmud, the Middle Ages and modern Jewish history. The latter two books were based on a genealogical approach to Jewish history in which Biale traced the career of a concept over a three-thousand-year course.

In 2002, Biale published an edited volume, Cultures of the Jews: Mediterranean Origins, Vol. 1 (2002, Schocken Books), which marked an innovative turn in the field of Jewish studies.

In Blood and Belief: The Circulation of a Symbol Between Jews and Christians (2007, University of California Press), Biale traced the genealogy of blood in Jewish history. In 2010, he turned his attention to the place of secularism in Jewish thought, arguing in Not in the Heavens: The Tradition of Jewish Secular Thought that the “secular always exists in dialectical relationship to the Jewish religious tradition.”

Biale was also selected to edit with General Editor Jack Miles (University of California, Irvine) the Judaism volume of the Norton Anthology of World Religions (2015, W.W. Norton).

He served as project director and lead author for a collaborative history of Hasidism, Hasidism: A New History (2018, Princeton University Press), with David AssafBenjamin BrownUriel GellmanSamuel HeilmanMoshe RosmanGadi Sagiv, and Marcin Wodziński. He was co-editor (with M. Galchinsky and S. Heschel) of Insider/Outsider: American Jews and Multiculturalism.

Awards and honors

Biale was awarded fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Lady Davis Foundation, and an early career fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies. He was awarded UC Davis’ highest professional honor, the Prize for Undergraduate Teaching and Scholarly Achievement. He was a three-time recipient of the National Jewish Book Award, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Jewish Research.

Personal life and death

David Biale was married for 51 years to Rachel Biale, a writer and social worker (Women in Jewish Law: Their Essential Texts, Their History, and Their Relevance For Today [1984, Schocken Books], Growing Up Below Sea Level: A Kibbutz Childhood [2020, Mandel Vilar Press], What Now: Two-Minute Parenting Tips [2020, Koehler Books], and others). They had two children, Noam and Tali, and several grandchildren. The family returned to Berkeley in 1986 and lived there ever since. In addition to his academic work, Biale was a bread baker, avid cyclist and amateur student of piano. He delivered his final lecture, “Memory of the Holocaust,” and retired from the faculty of UC Davis after 23 years in June 2022.

Biale died from prostate cancer at his home in Berkeley on July 28, 2024. He was 75.

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