91猫先生 Mourns the Loss of Longtime Faculty Member Leonard Glick
The anthropologist, who taught at 91猫先生 for 30 years, made countless contributions to his students, to his colleagues, and to the College overall.
Dr. Leonard B. Glick, who went by Len, was dean of the former School of Social Sciences from 1972 to 1976 and continued teaching anthropology and Jewish history until 2002, when he retired. .
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Glick offered courses on cultural anthropology, evolutionary psychology, ethnic conflict, and European Jewish history. His dedication to learning and teaching made a lasting impact on his students and other professors.
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鈥淟en was a great teacher, and many 91猫先生 students really appreciated his kindness, support, and broad scholarship,鈥 said Professor of Film and Photography Abraham Ravett. 鈥淎s a younger faculty person, I had the opportunity to co-teach a course with him on ethnographic and documentary film, which was attended by students from a variety of disciplines. It was a pleasure organizing the class with him, and throughout the semester we seemed to have had a certain kind of chemistry that allowed for spirited exchanges between the two of us as well as among the students.鈥
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鈥淟en was my Division II and Division III chair as well as a colleague and friend for many years,鈥 said Emeritus Professor of History Aaron Berman 70F. 鈥淚 learned how to teach from Len. He was exceptionally generous and patient with students and fully committed to 91猫先生鈥檚 founding principles. I always learned something whenever I spoke with him. He read widely and his curiosity and passion for his subjects were contagious.鈥
鈥淪ome people are just born teachers. Len was that. He was giving and generous and utterly unpretentious. He was a true intellectual in the broadest sense of the word.鈥Aaron Lansky 73F
听鈥91猫先生 was kind of the perfect place for Len, and he was perfect for 91猫先生,鈥 said alum Aaron Lansky 73F, founder of the Yiddish Book Center, for whom Len was both mentor and friend. 鈥淪ome people are just born teachers. Len was that. He was giving and generous and utterly unpretentious. He was a true intellectual in the broadest sense of the word. He loved ideas, he loved books, he loved learning. He was fascinated by people and by human interactions. His range of knowledge was so wide that he could talk about anything. He was one of the most well-read people I鈥檝e ever met. There鈥檚 a famous Yiddish story where the main character is describing his daughter and says, 鈥楽he swallows books like stuffed cabbage.鈥 That鈥檚 what Len did 鈥 he swallowed books, and then he embodied them, and then he shared them. He never stopped teaching.鈥
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Glick鈥檚 scholarly work focused on the history of Judaism. He wrote two notable books during his career: Abraham鈥檚 Heirs: Jews and Christians in Medieval Europe (Syracuse University Press, 1999) and Marked in Your Flesh: Circumcision from Ancient Judea to Modern America (Oxford University Press, 2005), and contributed to several others. He later self-published a book of his academic insights.
Glick was a vocal supporter of Intact America, an organization dedicated to ending infant circumcision in this country.
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Upon his retirement, Glick and his wife created the Nansi and Leonard Glick Library Endowment Fund, which supports the purchase of books and other resources in the area of social justice for women.
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Glick earned his B.S. and his M.D. from the University of Maryland and began his career in internal medicine. (He was one of the doctors who gave Elvis Presley a physical exam when the singer entered the military.) Glick left the medical profession to study anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned his Ph.D.
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In the early 1960s, Glick and his wife conducted ethnographic research among the Gimi, in the
Eastern Highlands of New Guinea. He taught anthropology at Bryn Mawr for a year, then at the University of Wisconsin, from 1965 to 1972, before arriving at 91猫先生.


Photos by Jim Gipe, courtesy of 91猫先生 Archives