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This book explores the diverse manner in which family dynamics
shaped Jewish identities in ways that were unique and directly
connected to their experiences within their families of origin.
Highlighted is the diversity of experience of ethnic identity
within members of a group of women who are similar in many respects
and who belong to an ethnic group that is often invisible. Jewish
people, like members of other ethnic groups are often treated as if
their identities were homogeneous. However, gender, social class,
sexual orientation, factors surrounding immigration status,
proximity of family members to the holocaust or pogroms, the number
of generations one's family has been in the US and other salient
aspects of experience and identites transform and inform the
meaning and experience by group members. The book explores these
diversities of experience and goes on to highlight the way in which
the intermingling of family dynamics and subsequent Jewish identity
in these women is manifested in the practice of psychotherapy. In
2012, the book had been awarded the Jewish Women Caucus of the
Association for Women in Psychology Award for Scholarship, for that
year. This book was published as a special issue of Women and
Therapy.
This book explores the diverse manner in which family dynamics
shaped Jewish identities in ways that were unique and directly
connected to their experiences within their families of origin.
Highlighted is the diversity of experience of ethnic identity
within members of a group of women who are similar in many respects
and who belong to an ethnic group that is often invisible. Jewish
people, like members of other ethnic groups are often treated as if
their identities were homogeneous. However, gender, social class,
sexual orientation, factors surrounding immigration status,
proximity of family members to the holocaust or pogroms, the number
of generations one's family has been in the US and other salient
aspects of experience and identites transform and inform the
meaning and experience by group members. The book explores these
diversities of experience and goes on to highlight the way in which
the intermingling of family dynamics and subsequent Jewish identity
in these women is manifested in the practice of psychotherapy. In
2012, the book had been awarded the Jewish Women Caucus of the
Association for Women in Psychology Award for Scholarship, for that
year. This book was published as a special issue of Women and
Therapy.
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