Assistant Professor of Women and Gender Studies & Jewish Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
Samira K. Mehta's research and teaching focus on the intersections of religion, culture, and gender, including the politics of family life and reproduction in the United States. Her first book, Beyond Chrismukkah: The Christian-Jewish Interfaith Family in America (University of North Carolina Press, 2018) was a National Jewish book award finalist.
Mehta’s current project, God Bless the Pill? Sexuality, Contraception, and American Religion examines the role of Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant voices in competing moral logics of contraception, population control, and eugenics from the mid-twentieth century to the present. Research from this project appears in “Family Planning is a Christian Duty: Religion, Population Control, and the Pill in the 1960s” from Devotions and Desires: Histories of Sexuality and Religion in the Twentieth- Century United States.
She is the co-chair of the Religions and Families in North America Seminar of the American Academy of Religion and serves on the steering committee of the North American Religions Program Unit of the AAR. She is also a member of the Diversity and Inclusion Task Force of the Association for Jewish Studies. Mehta has held fellowships from the John W. Kluge Center of the Library of Congress, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Sloan Foundation’s Center for Myth and Ritual in American Life, the American Jewish Archives, and the Northeastern Regional Fellowship Consortium, among others. Mehta holds degrees from Emory University, Harvard University, and Swarthmore College.
May 29, 2024 01:57 am UTC| Insights & Views Life
More than 10 years ago, I attended a college friends wedding in New York City. My friend is Muslim, her husband Jewish. They were married under a Jewish wedding canopy made from the grooms bar mitzvah prayer shawl ...
Asian Jewish Americans have a double reason to celebrate their heritage in May
May 15, 2024 07:53 am UTC| Insights & Views
May is both Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month and Jewish American Heritage Month. Two entirely separate commemorations for two entirely separate communities, right? Think again. Not...