Arie M. Dubnov
Arie M. Dubnov (Hebrew: אריה דובנוב; born 1977) is an Israeli-born, US-based essayist and historian. He specializes in modern Jewish and Israeli history, nationalism, the history of the British Empire in the Middle East, and intellectual history. He currently serves as the Max Ticktin Chair of Israel Studies at George Washington University.
Education and career
Dubnov was born in Petach-Tikvah, Israel, in 1977.[1] He earned his BA, MA, and PhD in history from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and was a George L. Mosse fellow at the University of Wisconsin–Madison before serving as acting assistant professor at Stanford University and Senior Lecturer at the University of Haifa.[2][3]
In 2017, Dubnov became the inaugural holder of the Max Ticktin Chair of Israel Studies at George Washington University, where he also serves as director of the Middle East Program in addition to his role as chair.[3]
In addition to his scholarly work, Dubnov has written a number of Hebrew and English essays, op-eds, and short stories for publications such as Haaretz, Ho!, Yedioth Ahronoth, and The Jewish Quarterly, among others.[3][4]
Scholarship and research
Dubnov’s scholarship spans intellectual history, Zionism, Empire and decolonization, and comparative nationalism. His work often explores the intersections of liberalism, Jewish identity, and imperial contexts, and he has written extensively on British imperial federalism, the history of Zionism, and the global history of partitions.[3]
Dubnov’s first book, Isaiah Berlin: The Journey of a Jewish Liberal (2012), was an intellectual biography of the liberal philosopher and British-Jewish thinker Isaiah Berlin. The book offers a reassessment of Berlin’s life and thought, tracing his intellectual development from childhood to his more mature work. It examines Berlin both as an East European Jewish émigré and a British liberal thinker, highlighting the relationship between his liberal philosophy and his Zionist sympathies.[5]
The book received mixed reviews from critics. Historian Noam Pianko praised it as “a compelling claim that Berlin’s ambivalence toward Zionism shaped his communitarian impulses and distinguished him from other British liberal theorists,”[5] while political theorist Kei Hiruta described it as “a well-researched and illuminating study that situates Berlin’s thought within the tensions of his Jewish identity and liberal commitments.”[6] However, Aileen Kelly, a historian of Russian intellectual history, criticized the book for downplaying Berlin’s Russian identity,[7] while political scientist Joshua Cherniss characterized it as “an insightful but sometimes overstated attempt to read Berlin through the lens of Jewishness.”[8]
Role in AIS dispute (2019)
In 2019, Dubnov was awarded the AIS-Israel Institute Young Scholar Award from the Association for Israel Studies (AIS). However, he declined the award and an invitation to join the AIS board, protesting against the special issue of the journal Israel Studies entitled "Word Crimes: Reclaiming The Language of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict." Dubnov, along with numerous other scholars, criticized the "Word Crimes" issue for blurring the lines between advocacy and scholarship and attempting to police academic debate on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[9]
During the controversy, numerous board members resigned and issued a letter of dissent, arguing that the special issue deviated from academic standards and began to stray too far into political advocacy.[10] Following the protest, the co-editors of Israel Studies published a statement acknowledging flaws in the decision-making process, expressing regret, and pledging to implement clear governance and editorial procedures. However, they did not retract the issue, maintaining that such dissent was not "universal."[10]
Selected works
Books
- Isaiah Berlin: The Journey of a Jewish Liberal (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012)
- Partitions: A Transnational History of 20th Century Territorial Separatism (co-edited with Laura Robson, Stanford University Press, 2019).
- Amos Oz’s Two Pens: Between Literature and Politics (Routledge, 2023).
- Zionism – A New History: The Beginnings of Jewish Nationalism (Lamda/Open University Press, 2025, in Hebrew).
Articles
- “Politics of the Comparative Gaze: The Three Languages of Right-Wing Zionist Radicalism,” Palestine/Israel Review (2025).
- “Nahum Slouschz and the Birth of Hebraic Mediterraneità,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft (2023).
- “‘I Am Civil War,’ Or: Haim Gouri’s Poetics of Lyrical Concealment,” Dibur: Literary Journal (2023).
- “The Toynbee Affair at 100: The Birth of ‘World History’ and the Long Shadow of the Interwar Liberal Imaginaire,” Histories (2023).
- “Can Parallels Meet? Hannah Arendt and Isaiah Berlin on the Jewish Post-Emancipatory Quest for Political Freedom,” Leo Baeck Institute Year Book (2017).
- "'Those New Men of the Sixties': Nihilism in the Liberal Imagination." Rethinking History, vol. 17, no. 1 (2013), 18-40.
- “Anti-Cosmopolitan Liberalism: Isaiah Berlin, Jacob Talmon and the Dilemma of National Identity,” Nations and Nationalism (2010).
References
- ^ "Arie Dubnov, Ph.D." Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ "Arie M. Dubnov". Stanford: The Europe Center. Stanford University. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ a b c d "Arie M. Dubnov". Department of History, Columbian College of Arts & Sciences. George Washington University. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ Dubnov, Arie. "Itamar Ben-Avi". The Jewish Quarterly. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ a b Pianko, Noam (2013). "Isaiah Berlin: The Journey of a Jewish Liberal by Arie M. Dubnov [Review]". Journal of Jewish Identities. 6 (2): 96–98. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ Hiruta, Kei (2014). "Isaiah Berlin: The Journey of a Jewish Liberal". The European Legacy. 19 (4): 508–509. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ Kelly, Aileen (20 June 2013). "Getting Isaiah Berlin Wrong". The New York Review of Books. NYRev Inc. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ Cherniss, Joshua (Fall 2012). "It's Complicated". Jewish Review of Books. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ Kafka, Alexander. "Israel studies journal stokes row over 'word crimes'". University World News. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved 30 November 2025.
- ^ a b Maltz, Judy (August 1, 2019). "Editors Apologize After Israel Studies Publication Accused of anti-BDS, pro-Israel Bias". Haaretz. Haaretz Daily Newspaper Ltd. Retrieved 30 November 2025.