Magid served as a visiting professor at
University of Massachusetts Amherst,
Clark University, and
Boston University. He was the Anna Smith Fine Chair in Jewish Thought at
Rice University from 1994 to 1996 and then joined the faculty of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of America before leaving for
Indiana University. In 2023-24, Magid was a Visiting Professor of Modern Jewish Studies at the
Harvard Divinity School. Major research grants include a 2015-16 research fellowship at the
Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the
University of Pennsylvania and 2017-18
National Endowment for the Humanities Senior Fellowship at the
Center for Jewish History for a book project on "American Jewish Survivalism:
Meir Kahane and the Politics of Pride." He is an elected member of the
American Academy of Jewish Research. Magid has served as the rabbi of the
Fire Island Synagogue since 1997. He is a former contributing editor at
Tablet Magazine and was the editor of Jewish Thought and Culture for
Tikkun magazine.
From Metaphysics to Midrash received the 2008
American Academy of Religion Award for best book in religion in the textual studies category. Magid is the editor of ''God's Voice from the Void: Old and New Essays on Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav
(SUNY Press, 2001) and co-editor of Beginning Again: Toward a Hermeneutic of Jewish Texts'' (Seven Bridges Press, 2002). In his 2023 book
The Necessity of Exile, Magid rethinks the role of
Zionism in Jewish identity, recenters Judaism over
nationalism, and calls for a return to religion to keep Jews together. Referencing
Eugene Borowitz, he writes: "Anybody who cares seriously about being a Jew is in Exile and would be in Exile even if that person were in Jerusalem." In May 2024, Magid and Terrence L. Johnson co-convened the academic conference "Jews and Black Theory: Conceptualizing Otherness in the Twenty-First Century". Magid gave opening remarks and chaired a session titled "Blackness, Whiteness, and Double Consciousness". ==Bibliography==