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Jewish Women's History from Antiquity to the Present is broad in
geographical scope exploring Jewish women's lives in what is now
Eastern and Western Europe, Britain, Israel, Turkey, North Africa,
and North America. Editors Federica Francesconi and Rebecca Lynn
Winer focus the volume on reconstructing the experiences of
ordinary women and situating those of the extraordinary and famous
within the gender systems of their times and places. The twenty-one
contributors analyze the history of Jewish women in the light of
gender as religious, cultural, and social construct. They apply new
methodologies in approaching rabbinic sources, prescriptive
literature, and musar (ethics), interrogating them about female
roles in the biblical and rabbinic imaginations, and in relation to
women's restrictions and quotidian actions on the ground. They
explore Jewish's women experiences of persecution, displacement,
immigration, integration, and social mobility from the medieval age
through the nineteenth century. And for the modern era, this volume
assesses women's spiritual developments; how they experienced
changes in religious and political societies, both Jewish and
non-Jewish; the history of women in the Holocaust, their struggle
through persecution and deportation; women's everyday concerns,
Jewish lesbian activism, and the spiritual sphere in the
contemporary era. Contributors reinterpret rabbinical responsa
through new lenses and study a plethora of unpublished and
previously unknown archival sources, such as community ordinances
and court records, alongside autobiographies, letters, poetry,
narrative prose, devotional objects, the built environment,
illuminated manuscripts, and early printed books. This publication
is significant within the field of Jewish studies and beyond; the
essays include comparative material and have the potential to reach
scholarly audiences in many related fields but are also written to
be accessible to all, with the introductions in every chapter aimed
at orienting the enthusiast from outside academia to each time and
place.
The Cambridge Guide to Jewish History, Religion, and Culture is a
comprehensive and engaging overview of Jewish life, from its
origins in the ancient Near East to its impact on contemporary
popular culture. The twenty-one essays, arranged historically and
thematically, and written specially for this volume by leading
scholars, examine the development of Judaism and the evolution of
Jewish history and culture over many centuries and in a range of
locales. They emphasize the ongoing diversity and creativity of the
Jewish experience. Unlike previous anthologies, which concentrate
on elite groups and expressions of a male-oriented rabbinic
culture, this volume also includes the range of experiences of
ordinary people and looks at the lives and achievements of women in
every place and era. The many illustrations, maps, timeline, and
glossary of important terms enhance this book s accessibility to
students and general readers.
The Talmud is the repository of thousands of years of Jewish
wisdom. It is a conglomerate of law, legend, and philosophy, a
blend of unique logic and shrewd pragmatism, of history and
science, of anecdotes and humor. Unfortunately, its sometimes
complex subject matter often seems irrelevant in today's world. In
this edited volume, sixteen eminent North American and Israeli
scholars from several schools of Jewish thought grapple with the
text and tradition of Talmud, talking personally about their own
reasons for studying it. Each of these scholars and teachers
believes that Talmud is indispensible to any serious study of
modern Judaism and so each essay challenges the reader to engage in
his or her own individual journey of discovery. The diverse
feminist, rabbinic, educational, and philosophical approaches in
this collection are as varied as the contributors' experiences.
Their essays are accessible, personal accounts of their individual
discovery of the Talmud, reflecting the vitality and profundity of
modern religious thought and experience.
The Cambridge Dictionary of Jewish History, Religion, and Culture
is an authoritative and accessible reference work for a
twenty-first-century audience. Its entries, written by eminent
scholars, define the spiritual and intellectual concepts and
religious movements that distinguish Judaism and the Jewish
experience; they discuss central personalities and places,
formative events, and enduring literary and cultural contributions,
and they illuminate the lives of ordinary Jewish men and women.
Essays explore Jewish history from ancient times to the present and
consider all aspects of Judaism, including religious practices and
rituals, legal teachings and legendary traditions, and rationalism,
mysticism, and messianism. This reference work differs from many
others in its broad exploration of the Jewish experience beyond
Judaism. Entries discuss secular and political movements and
achievements and delineate Jewish endeavors in literature, art,
music, theater, dance, film, broadcasting, sports, science,
medicine, and ecology, among many other topics from the Bible to
the Internet.
The Cambridge Guide to Jewish History, Religion, and Culture is a
comprehensive and engaging overview of Jewish life, from its
origins in the ancient Near East to its impact on contemporary
popular culture. The twenty-one essays, arranged historically and
thematically, and written specially for this volume by leading
scholars, examine the development of Judaism and the evolution of
Jewish history and culture over many centuries and in a range of
locales. They emphasize the ongoing diversity and creativity of the
Jewish experience. Unlike previous anthologies, which concentrate
on elite groups and expressions of a male-oriented rabbinic
culture, this volume also includes the range of experiences of
ordinary people and looks at the lives and achievements of women in
every place and era. The many illustrations, maps, timeline, and
glossary of important terms enhance this book's accessibility to
students and general readers.
While most gender-based analyses of rabbinic Judaism concentrate on
the status of women in the halakhah (the rabbinic legal tradition),
Judith R. Baskin turns her attention to the construction of women
in the aggadic midrash, a collection of expansions of the biblical
text, rabbinic ruminations, and homiletical discourses that
constitutes the non-legal component of rabbinic literature.
Examining rabbinic convictions of female alterity, competing
narratives of creation, and justifications of female disadvantages,
as well as aggadic understandings of the ideal wife, the dilemma of
infertility, and women among women and as individuals, she shows
that rabbinic Judaism, a tradition formed by men for a male
community, deeply valued the essential contributions of wives and
mothers while also consciously constructing women as other and
lesser than men.
Recent feminist scholarship has illuminated many aspects of the
significance of gender in biblical and halakhic texts but there has
been little previous study of how aggadic literature portrays
females and the feminine. Such representations, Baskin argues,
often offer a more nuanced and complex view of women and their
actual lives than the rigorous proscriptions of legal discourse.
Jewish Women's History from Antiquity to the Present is broad in
geographical scope exploring Jewish women's lives in what is now
Eastern and Western Europe, Britain, Israel, Turkey, North Africa,
and North America. Editors Federica Francesconi and Rebecca Lynn
Winer focus the volume on reconstructing the experiences of
ordinary women and situating those of the extraordinary and famous
within the gender systems of their times and places. The twenty-one
contributors analyze the history of Jewish women in the light of
gender as religious, cultural, and social construct. They apply new
methodologies in approaching rabbinic sources, prescriptive
literature, and musar (ethics), interrogating them about female
roles in the biblical and rabbinic imaginations, and in relation to
women's restrictions and quotidian actions on the ground. They
explore Jewish's women experiences of persecution, displacement,
immigration, integration, and social mobility from the medieval age
through the nineteenth century. And for the modern era, this volume
assesses women's spiritual developments; how they experienced
changes in religious and political societies, both Jewish and
non-Jewish; the history of women in the Holocaust, their struggle
through persecution and deportation; women's everyday concerns,
Jewish lesbian activism, and the spiritual sphere in the
contemporary era. Contributors reinterpret rabbinical responsa
through new lenses and study a plethora of unpublished and
previously unknown archival sources, such as community ordinances
and court records, alongside autobiographies, letters, poetry,
narrative prose, devotional objects, the built environment,
illuminated manuscripts, and early printed books. This publication
is significant within the field of Jewish studies and beyond; the
essays include comparative material and have the potential to reach
scholarly audiences in many related fields but are also written to
be accessible to all, with the introductions in every chapter aimed
at orienting the enthusiast from outside academia to each time and
place.
This collection of revised and new essays explores Jewish women's
history. Topics include: portrayals of women in the Hebrew bible;
the image and status of women in the diaspora world of late
antiquity; Jewish women in the Middle Ages; Sephardi women in the
medievil and early modern periods; Italian Jewish women; prayers in
Yiddish and the religious world of Ashkenazic women; gender and the
immigrant Jewish experience in the United States.
Jewish women writers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries lived with a sense of painful connection to a culture
that rejected their aspirations. Raised in a Jewish environment
wary of female aspirations and in a wider world that was only
marginally more sympathetic to their ambitions, this diverse group
often found that a life devoted to literary expression required
sacrifices and painful choices. Writing, however, enabled them to
reclaim and explore their Jewish heritage. Responding to a variety
of Jewish women's voices in Hebrew, Yiddish, English, and Spanish,
this collection of seventeen essays surveys the achievements of
Jewish women writers from the Middle Ages to the present. Scholars
of Jewish literature chronicle the Jewish encounter with modernity
and document female strategies for constructing intellectual and
emotional identities amidst the competing demands of traditional
norms, familial obligations, and economic survival. The themes of
repression and equivocal liberation resonate throughout, as the
authors reflect on the silencing of the female voice in a
traditional Jewish culture that most often denied women the
education and the empowerment requisite for recording their
thoughts and feelings. While individual essays reveal literary
discoveries of self and forgings of identity by women rising to the
opportunities and challenges of drastically altered Jewish social
realities, a significant number also show the sad decline of women
writers upon whom silence was reimposed. Several chapters consider
how Jewish women were depicted by male writers from the Middle Ages
through the mid-nineteenth century. A final essay documents the
ways in which memory, testimony, and survival affect the writing of
women who survived the Holocaust, a perspective frequently
marginalized in studies of Holocaust literature. Women of the Word
is part of an emerging effort to listen to the voices of Jewish
women both past and present. Written in a period when Jewish women
writers internationally are creating a wealth of diverse literary
works, these essays take note of the short time during which Jewish
women's writing has flourished and inspire readers with the
richness of the literature that such writers have already produced.
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