Samuel Moyn is the Kent Professor of Law and History at Yale University, where he also serves as head of Grace Hopper College. His scholarship has included studies of Jewish intellectuals in the twentieth century (such as Liberalism against Itself: Cold War Intellectuals and the Making of Our Times [2023] and Origins of the Other: Emmanuel Levinas Between Revelation and Ethics [2005], the making of Holocaust memory (A Holocaust Controversy: The Treblinka Affair in Postwar France [2005]), and modern Jewish thought generally (“Divine and Human Love: Franz Rosenzweig’s History of the Song of Songs,” Jewish Studies Quarterly 12.2 (June 2005): 194-212; “The Spirit of Jewish History,” in Cambridge History of Jewish Philosophy: The Modern Era (2012) and Hermann Cohen: Writings on Neo-Kantianism and Jewish Philosophy (co-edited, 2021).