The Jewish Quarterly Review

Quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering Jewish studies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jewish Quarterly Review is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering Jewish studies. It is published by the University of Pennsylvania Press on behalf of the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies (University of Pennsylvania). The editors-in-chief are David N. Myers (UCLA) and Natalie Dohrmann (University of Pennsylvania).[1]

DisciplineJewish studies
LanguageEnglish
EditedbyDavid N. Myers, Natalie Dohrmann
History1889-present
Quick facts Discipline, Language ...
The Jewish Quarterly Review
DisciplineJewish studies
LanguageEnglish
Edited byDavid N. Myers, Natalie Dohrmann
Publication details
History1889-present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Jew. Q. Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0021-6682 (print)
1553-0604 (web)
LCCN12014315
JSTOR00216682
OCLC no.470181616
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The journal was established in London in 1889 by Israel Abrahams and Claude G. Montefiore as an English-language concurrent of the French Revue des études juives, itself an outgrowth of the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement. In 1910, it was brought to Pennsylvania's Dropsie College, the predecessor of the Katz Center.[2][3]

Jewish Quarterly Review is the oldest English-language journal of Judaic scholarship.[3] It is available online through Project MUSE and JSTOR. As of 2026, the journal is open access.[1]

References

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