On Revival

Library Chat: Roni Henig and Gil Hochberg

Join Roni Henig—former Fellow at the Institute, writer, and Assistant Professor of Modern Hebrew Literature—for a thought-provoking conversation with Gil Hochberg, Professor of Hebrew and Visual Studies, Comparative Literature, and Middle East Studies at Columbia University. Together, they delve into Henig’s new book, On Revival: Hebrew Literature Between Life and Death—written during her fellowship at the Institute—examining its central themes: revival, return, and the political life of memory. Their dialogue traces how these powerful ideas emerge across literature, philosophy, and critical theory, offering a rich exploration of cultural memory and intellectual legacy.

Gil Hochberg

Gil Z. Hochberg is Ransford Professor of Hebrew and Comparative Literature, and Middle East Studies at Columbia University and Chair of the department of Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies (MESAAS). Her research focuses on the intersections among psychoanalysis, postcolonial theory, nationalism, gender and sexuality. She is the author of three books, co-editor of two and has published numerous essays on the politics of art in the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Her latest book, Becoming Palestine: Toward an Archival Imagination of the Future (Duke University Press, 2021), is winner of the 2022 René Wellek Prize from the American Comparative Literature Association.

Roni Henig

Roni Henig is an Assistant Professor of Modern Hebrew Literature at New York University. She researches modern Hebrew literature and Jewish literatures in a comparative context. Her work focuses on critical literary theory, language politics, multilingualism, dysfluency studies, and the critique of nationalism across Jewish literatures and beyond. Her book, On Revival: Hebrew Literature Between Life and Death (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2024), is a critique of the discourse of language revival in modern Hebrew literature. The book explores the notion of Hebrew revival in early twentieth-century Hebrew literary discourse and its role in the formation of Jewish nationalism, Zionism, and modern Hebrew culture. Prior to joining NYU, Henig was a Research Fellow at Columbia University Institute for Ideas and Imagination at Reid Hall, Paris. Her work has been awarded the 2021 Baron Dissertation Prize by Columbia University and the 2017 A. Owen Aldridge Prize by the American Comparative Literature Association.

MORE CAHIERS

Belarusian Resistance
Hanna Liubakova
OCTOBER 13, 2025
Between Care and Writing
Atelier Episode with Will Harris
AUGUST 12, 2025
Sound Painting and Other Ways of Hearing
Atelier Episode with Peter Susser
AUGUST 5, 2025
Voglio Vivere Una Favola
Annie Ernaux et Thomas Dodman
JULY 23, 2025
The Past is Present
Library Chat: Anocha Suwichakornpong and Mae Ngai
JULY 21, 2025
Library Chat: David Sulzer and Daniel Levin Becker
Library Chat: David Sulzer and Daniel Levin Becker
JULY 16, 2025
Between Words
Library Chat: Laia Jufresa and Daniel Levin Becker
JULY 15, 2025
Library Chat: Nick Nesbitt and Jana Ndiaye Berankova
JULY 14, 2025
Rescuing Beauty
Library Chat: Will Harris and Haman Mpadire
JULY 2, 2025
Every Poet in the Garden
Library Chat: Lauren Robertson and Kate Daudy
JUNE 30, 2025
We use cookies to enhance your experience of visiting this website. Find out more.
REJECT