Zohar Shavit
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Zohar Shavit (; born 1951) is an Israeli professor at
Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU) is a Public university, public research university in Tel Aviv, Israel. With over 30,000 students, it is the largest university in the country. Located in northwest Tel Aviv, the university is the center of teaching and ...
’s School for Cultural Studies, laureate of the
Israel Prize The Israel Prize (; ''pras israél'') is an award bestowed by the State of Israel, and regarded as the state's highest cultural honor. History Prior to the Israel Prize, the most significant award in the arts was the Dizengoff Prize and in Israel ...
in the field of Culture and Arts for 2025.


Biography

Shavit is married to the historian, writer and fellow Tel Aviv University academic
Yaacov Shavit Yaacov Shavit (; born 24 October 1944) is an emeritus professor at the Department of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University. His main fields of study are the history of modern Israel and modern Jewish intellectual and cultural history. Shavit has al ...
. She is the mother of Noga, Uriya, and Avner.


Public career

In 2000, she was appointed a cultural affairs advisor to
Matan Vilnai Matan Vilnai (; born 20 May 1944) is an Israeli politician and a former major general in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). A former Knesset member and government minister, he was appointed ambassador to China in 2012. Since 2017 Vilnai serves as ...
, the Minister of Science, Culture and Sport. She served as an advisor to the
Knesset The Knesset ( , ) is the Unicameralism, unicameral legislature of Israel. The Knesset passes all laws, elects the President of Israel, president and Prime Minister of Israel, prime minister, approves the Cabinet of Israel, cabinet, and supe ...
's education and cultural committee and was a member of the board of directors of the Second Television and Radio Authority, and a member of the New Council for Arts and Culture. She is a member of the council of the
Israeli Opera The Israeli Opera, formerly known as the New Israeli Opera, is the principal opera company of Israel. It was founded in 1985 after lack of Israeli government funding led to the demise of the Israel National Opera. Since 1994 the Tel Aviv Perfor ...
and of the Board of Governors of literary prizes for the Ministry of Culture. She chaired as the Ministry of Science, Culture and Sport's ''Vision 2000'' committee, which drafted and presented the Ministry's cultural program (''Culture Charter – Vision 2000, Cultural Policy for the State of Israel in the 21st Century: Consensus Statement''). She initiated the reading project of "A Book at every House" and chaired it for six years. In 2009, Shavit was elected to Tel Aviv's city council, and appointed Cultural Affairs Advisor to
Ron Huldai Ron Huldai (; born 26 August 1944) is an Israeli politician and businessman who has been Mayor of Tel Aviv since 1998. Before taking office as mayor, Huldai served as a fighter pilot and commander in the Israeli Air Force. After leaving the ...
, the city's Mayor. In this capacity, she initiated several cultural projects, among which were changing the status of two archives: the
Gnazim Archive Gnazim Institute of the Hebrew Writers Association in Israel () (founded in 1950) is the largest Hebrew literature archive in the world. It is located at Beit Ariela in Tel Aviv. History The archive was established in 1951 by the Hebrew Writers ...
and the Theater archive, which was made part of
Beit Ariela Beit Ariela Shaar Zion Library is the central public library in Tel Aviv. History Pre-State The library was founded in 1886 in Jaffa at the initiative of the "Ezrat Israel" society ("Assistance to Israel") – the organization that helped to estab ...
– the municipal main library. She initiated the "Poetry on the Road" project in which passages of poetry were exhibited throughout the city on placards, banners and signs, including at bus stations, three of the city's boulevards and on city garbage trucks. In addition, she initiated a poetry writing competition. In 2025, prof.Shavit was announced as the laureate of the Israel Prize in the field of Culture and Arts.


Academic career

Shavit is the founder and chair of the Master's Program in the Research of Child and Youth Culture at Tel Aviv University. Her book ''The Construction of Hebrew Culture in the Jewish Yishuv in Eretz-Israel''(1998) examined the cultural institutions in the context of the special status Hebrew culture enjoyed among the political and cultural leadership of the
Yishuv The Yishuv (), HaYishuv Ha'ivri (), or HaYishuv HaYehudi Be'Eretz Yisra'el () was the community of Jews residing in Palestine prior to the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948. The term came into use in the 1880s, when there were about 2 ...
. Her book ''Literary Life in Eretz Israel 1910-1933'' (1982), which was based on hundreds of private letters and other archival materials, explores unknown chapters in transforming Eretz-Israel into the hegemonic center of Hebrew culture and described the inter-generational struggle over the governing literary norms. Her book ''Poetics of Children's Literature'' (1986; a revised Hebrew version – ''Just Childhood'' 1996) examines children's literature in its cultural contexts, and presents a theoretical model of an a-priori multi-readership: the child as an official addressee, and the adult as an unofficial addressee whose function keeps changing historically. She has also authored articles about the development of Hebrew children's literature and its function in the national renaissance of the Hebrew language as well as on Hebrew translations of prominent children's books by authors such as
Erich Kästner Emil Erich Kästner (; 23 February 1899 – 29 July 1974) was a German writer, poet, screenwriter and satirist, known primarily for his humorous, socially astute poems and for children's books including ''Emil and the Detectives'' and '' Lisa an ...
and Mira Lobe. Since the mid-1980s, Shavit has worked on the emergence of a new system of books for Jewish children in the German speaking areas since the last decades of the 18th century. The results of this comprehensive study were published as ''Deutsch-jüdische Kinder- und Jugendliteratur. Von der Haskalah bis 1945'' (with Hans-Heino Ewers, 1996) and in (2002, with Annegret Völpel). In these studies, Shavit described how these books served as agents of social change and their function in the construction of the children's Jewish identity. She conducted a larger scale research on the republic of books of the ''
Haskalah The ''Haskalah'' (; literally, "wisdom", "erudition" or "education"), often termed the Jewish Enlightenment, was an intellectual movement among the Jews of Central Europe, Central and Eastern Europe, with a certain influence on those in Wester ...
'' with Shmuel Feiner of
Bar-Ilan University Bar-Ilan University (BIU, , ''Universitat Bar-Ilan'') is a public research university in the Tel Aviv District city of Ramat Gan, Israel. Established in 1955, Bar Ilan is Israel's second-largest academic university institution. It has 20,000 ...
and Christoph Schulte of Potsdam University. The research focused on the various ways in which this new market was developed, organized, and monitored. A unique database with special software was developed especially for this research project and allowed for a unique broad analysis of the ''Haskalah'' books, of those involved in their creation, and of their readership. In 2014, together with Shmuel Feiner, Natalie Naimark-Goldberg, and Tal Kogman (eds.), she published ''The Library of the Haskalah'' ebrew a socio-historical study of the republic of books of the ''Haskalah''. Between 2013 and 2019, she conducted together with Simone Lässig (
Braunschweig Braunschweig () or Brunswick ( ; from Low German , local dialect: ) is a List of cities and towns in Germany, city in Lower Saxony, Germany, north of the Harz Mountains at the farthest navigable point of the river Oker, which connects it to the ...
, Washington) a comprehensive research project on ''Innovation through tradition? Approaching cultural transformations during the 'Sattelzeit' via Jewish educational media''. This research project examined how various media for children and young adults participated in and activated significant reforms in the Jewish society. Her own individual research project analyzed several cases of cultural translation: the first addressed the attempt to present new forms of daily practices, or more precisely – a new habitus, to the Jewish public. With guidelines on daily practices including personal hygiene, dress, language, leisure, and interactions with one's surroundings, these texts reached not only children – their official readership – but the parents' generation as well. As a test case, she analyzed the translation into Hebrew of passages of Rousseau's '' Émile''. The second project focused on the endeavor to present cultural models pertaining to ''Bürgertum'' and ''Bildung''. She analyzed how David Samostz, the translator of Campe's ''Robinson der Jüngere'', used his translation as a platform for illustrating typical scenarios of bourgeois families in which children are educated according to the principles of Philanthropinism. Samostz presented throughout his translation a model of bourgeois life and "staged" or dramatized various principles of philanthropic pedagogy. ''A Past without a Shadow'', ebrew, ''Avar Belo Tzel'', 1999her study of the construction of the past image in German books for children, was published by
Routledge Routledge ( ) is a British multinational corporation, multinational publisher. It was founded in 1836 by George Routledge, and specialises in providing academic books, academic journals, journals and online resources in the fields of the humanit ...
in 2005 and gained academic and public attention. This study described how books published in West Germany since 1945, which received glowing reviews and were awarded prestigious literary prizes, have constructed a “story” in which the horrors of the
Third Reich Nazi Germany, officially known as the German Reich and later the Greater German Reich, was the German state between 1933 and 1945, when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country, transforming it into a totalitarian dictat ...
have been systematically screened and filtered. The prevailing narrative for children failed to acknowledge German responsibility for the suffering caused by the German people during the Third Reich and the
Holocaust The Holocaust (), known in Hebrew language, Hebrew as the (), was the genocide of History of the Jews in Europe, European Jews during World War II. From 1941 to 1945, Nazi Germany and Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy ...
. The construction of such a falsified past image resulted not from an attempt at Holocaust denial, but responded to the tacit demands of German society to participate in the creation of a wishful past image that gives expression to a conscious and unconscious code which existed at the heart of the West German narrative. This narrative focused on the German suffering, distinguished between the "Germans" and the "Nazis", and almost excluded the victims of the Final Solution from the past image and the collective memory. Since 2017, she has conducted two research projects both dealing with the social history of the Hebrew language. The first one deals with "Hebraization" as a project of nation building. It grapples with the unreliability of official assessments of Hebrew's dominance, and identifies and examines a broad variety of less politicized sources, such as various regulatory, personal, and commercial documents of the period as well as recently conducted oral interviews. Together, these reveal a more complete – and more complex – portrait of the linguistic reality of the time. The other research is based on her discovery of hitherto unknown archival material in the AIU archive in Paris. This project describes and accounts for the reasons behind
Eliezer Ben-Yehuda Eliezer Ben‑Yehuda (born Eliezer Yitzhak Perlman; 7 January 1858 – 16 December 1922) was a Russian–Jewish linguist, lexicographer, and journalist who immigrated to Jerusalem in 1881, when the Ottoman Empire ruled it. He is renowned as the ...
's decision to change his original intention to write a practical Hebrew dictionary and to create instead his greatest opus – ''The Complete Dictionary of Ancient and Modern Hebrew'' as a scientific historical ''Dictionary''.


Published works


Books

*''Literary Life in Eretz Israel 1910–1933''. The Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics in Collaboration with Hakibutz-Hameuchad, Tel Aviv, 1982. ebrew*''Poetics of Children's Literature''. The University of Georgia Press, Athens and London, 1986. * ''Die Darstellung des Dritten Reiches im Kinder- und Jugendbuch'' he Presentation of the Third Reich in Books for Children with Malte Dahrendorf. Dipa, Frankfurt a/M., 1988. (German). * Deutsch-jüdische Kinder- und Jugendliteratur von der Haskala bis 1945: Die deutsch- und hebräischsprachigen Schriften des deutschsprachigen Raums. Ein ... Handbuch in zwei Bänden 'German-Jewish Literature for Children and Adolescents: From the Haskalah to 1945. The German and Hebrew Texts in the German Speaking Area. A Bibliographical Handboo''.With Hans-Heino Ewers, in Zusammenrbeit mit Ran HaCohen. Metzler Verlag: Stuttgart, 1996. (German). *''The Construction of the Hebrew Culture in the Jewish Yishuv in Eretz Israel.'' The Israel Academy of Sciences and the Bialik Institute, Jerusalem, 1998. ebrew* . erman-Jewish Literature for Children and Adolescents: A Literary-Historical OutlineWith Annegret Völpel. Metzler Verlag: Stuttgart Weimar 2002. (German). * ''A Past Without Shadow: Constructing the Past in German Books for Children''. Routledge: New York, 2005. *''The Library of the Haskalah.'' With Shmuel Feiner, Natalie Naimark-Goldberg and Tal Kogman. Am Oved: Tel Aviv, 2014. ebrew* Cultural Translation: The Maskilic use of translated texts as means of  promoting social agenda. De Gruyter, 2025, 204 pp.


Translations

Shavit has also translated several children's books into Hebrew, including E.B. White's ''Charlotte's Web'', for which she received the "
Hans Christian Andersen Hans Christian Andersen ( , ; 2 April 1805 – 4 August 1875) was a Danish author. Although a prolific writer of plays, travelogue (literature), travelogues, novels, and poems, he is best remembered for his literary fairy tales. Andersen's fai ...
Certificate of Honor" for distinguished translation. *
Hugh Lofting Hugh John Lofting (14 January 1886 – 26 September 1947) was an English-American writer, trained as a civil engineer, who created the classic children's literature character Doctor Dolittle. The fictional physician talking to animals, based i ...
. ''
The Story of Doctor Dolittle ''The Story of Doctor Dolittle, Being the History of His Peculiar Life at Home and Astonishing Adventures in Foreign Parts'' (1920), written and illustrated by the British author Hugh Lofting, is the first of his Doctor Dolittle books, a series ...
.'' Masada: Tel Aviv, 1975. *
E. B. White Elwyn Brooks White (July 11, 1899 – October 1, 1985) was an American writer. He was the author of several highly popular books for children, including ''Stuart Little'' (1945), ''Charlotte's Web'' (1952), and '' The Trumpet of the Swan'' ...
. ''
Stuart Little ''Stuart Little'' is a 1945 American children's novel by E. B. White. It was White's first children's book, and became recognized as a classic in children's literature. ''Stuart Little'' was illustrated by the artist Garth Williams, also his f ...
.'' Zmora Bitan Modan: Tel Aviv, 1977. * E. B. White. ''
Charlotte's Web ''Charlotte's Web'' is a book of children's literature by American author E. B. White and illustrated by Garth Williams. It was published on October 15, 1952, by Harper & Brothers. It tells the story of a livestock pig named Wilbur and his frie ...
''. Zmora Bitan Modan: Tel Aviv, 1977. Revised translation 2007. * Robert Lawson. ''Mr. Twigg's Mistake''. Zmora Bitan Modan: Tel Aviv, 1978. *
Laura Ingalls Wilder Laura Elizabeth Ingalls Wilder (February 7, 1867 – February 10, 1957) was an American writer, teacher, and journalist. She is best known as the author of the children's book series ''Little House on the Prairie'', published between 1932 and 1 ...
. ''
By the Shores of Silver Lake ''By the Shores of Silver Lake'' is an autobiographical children's novel written by Laura Ingalls Wilder and published in 1939, the fifth of nine books in her Little House series. It spans just over one year, beginning when she is 12 years ol ...
.'' Zmora Bitan Modan: Tel Aviv, 1982. *
Roald Dahl Roald Dahl (13 September 1916 – 23 November 1990) was a British author of popular children's literature and short stories, a poet, screenwriter and a wartime Flying ace, fighter ace. His books have sold more than 300 million copies ...
. '' Danny, the Champion of the World''. Zmora Bitan: Tel Aviv, 1984. *
Myriam Harry Myriam Harry was the pen name of Maria Rosette Shapira (April 1869 – 10 March 1958), a French journalist and writer. The daughter of Moses Wilhelm and Anna Magdalena Rosette Shapira (née Jöckel), she was born in Jerusalem. Her father, ...
. ''"La Colline du Printemps"''. In Les amants de Sion, Fayard: Paris, 164–177. ith Avner Shavit Haaretz, June 19, 2010


References


External links


Zohar Shavit Official Page
at Tel Aviv University Website
Articles by Zohar Shavit
from the
National Library of Israel The National Library of Israel (NLI; ; ), formerly Jewish National and University Library (JNUL; ), is the library dedicated to collecting the cultural treasures of Israel and of Judaism, Jewish Cultural heritage, heritage. The library holds more ...

Published Columns
from the Israeli news website
Haaretz ''Haaretz'' (; originally ''Ḥadshot Haaretz'' – , , ) is an List of newspapers in Israel, Israeli newspaper. It was founded in 1918, making it the longest running newspaper currently in print in Israel. The paper is published in Hebrew lan ...
. {{DEFAULTSORT:Shavit, Zohar 1951 births Living people 21st-century Israeli women politicians City councillors of Tel Aviv-Yafo English–Hebrew translators Israeli translators Israeli women academics Jewish Israeli politicians Jewish women politicians Politicians from Tel Aviv Tel Aviv University alumni Academic staff of Tel Aviv University