Free Webinar
The Chelsea Carol Incident of 1949
Monday, December 11, 4:00-5:00 p.m. ET
Presented by Dr. Miriam Eve Mora
Nondenominational season’s greetings and celebrations have prompted numerous cultural conversations about “the war on Christmas” in recent years. But such controversies are not new. In this webinar, Dr. Miriam Mora discusses a story she uncovered in her research in the archives of the Wyner Family Jewish Heritage Center: How a Jewish family’s 1949 request for inclusivity around Christmas carols and pageants in their public school led to a widespread misunderstanding, and eventually caused panic and uproar within the Jewish community of Chelsea, Massachusetts.
Dr. Miriam Eve Mora is a historian of Jewish America, the Director of Academic and Public Programs at the Center for Jewish History in New York City, and professor of history at various institutions in and around New York City (currently teaching at the University at Albany, SUNY). She is also the co-creator of JewCE: The Jewish Comics Experience, a comics and pop culture convention celebrating diverse Jewish themes, characters, and narratives in sequential art.
She received her B.F.A. in Photography from Columbia College Chicago in 2007, her M.A. in Holocaust and Genocide Studies from West Chester University of Pennsylvania in 2009, and her Ph.D. in History from Wayne State University in 2019.
Her areas of research interest and specialization include American immigration and ethnicity, modern Jewish history, gender and antisemitism, Holocaust memory and representation in pop culture, masculinity, history of Irish conflict, and American Jewish acculturation.
Her first book, Carrying a Big Schtick: Jewish Acculturation and Masculinity in the Twentieth Century will be released from Wayne State University Press in May, 2024.