The Tribe of Dina: A Jewish Women's Anthology

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Author: Melanie Kaye-Kantrowitz

ISBN-10: 0807036056

ISBN-13: 9780807036051

Category: Jewish Literature Anthologies

In richly diverse essays, stories, memoirs, poems, and interviews, the contributors to this collection affirm the depth of Jewish women's participation in Jewish life and give strength to feminist struggles in the Jewish community.

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In richly diverse essays, stories, memoirs, poems, and interviews, the contributors to this collection affirm the depth of Jewish women's participation in Jewish life and give strength to feminist struggles in the Jewish community.Publishers WeeklyAlthough uneven in literary quality and sometimes naive, this potpourri of short fiction, poetry, essays and interviews is a vigorous, stimulating celebration of a multifaceted Jewish womanhood. Cultures outside the mainstream American experience are illuminated via memories of childhoods in a Jewish Sephardic home in Catholic Argentina and in a segregated Russian-Jewish community in China. Novelist Sarah Schulman offers a walking tour through radical Jewish women's history on the Lower East Side, 1879-1919, and Jerusalemite Chaya Shalom discusses the discrimination she has faced as a Sephardi and as a lesbian in Israel. Savina Teubal reads Genesis as the usurpation of a matriarchate by a patriarchy; and Julie Greenberg, a lesbian rabbinical student, attempts to reconcile Jewish traditions with feminism. Preserved here are a 19th century Moroccan ballad of a young woman who chooses martyrdom rather than joining the Sultan's harem and converting to Islam, and an autobiographical story by an American college student who was hidden in a Polish orphanage during WW II. The editors are both writing instructors at Vermont College. (Aug.)

\ Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly\ Although uneven in literary quality and sometimes naive, this potpourri of short fiction, poetry, essays and interviews is a vigorous, stimulating celebration of a multifaceted Jewish womanhood. Cultures outside the mainstream American experience are illuminated via memories of childhoods in a Jewish Sephardic home in Catholic Argentina and in a segregated Russian-Jewish community in China. Novelist Sarah Schulman offers a walking tour through radical Jewish women's history on the Lower East Side, 1879-1919, and Jerusalemite Chaya Shalom discusses the discrimination she has faced as a Sephardi and as a lesbian in Israel. Savina Teubal reads Genesis as the usurpation of a matriarchate by a patriarchy; and Julie Greenberg, a lesbian rabbinical student, attempts to reconcile Jewish traditions with feminism. Preserved here are a 19th century Moroccan ballad of a young woman who chooses martyrdom rather than joining the Sultan's harem and converting to Islam, and an autobiographical story by an American college student who was hidden in a Polish orphanage during WW II. The editors are both writing instructors at Vermont College. (Aug.)\ \ \ \ \ Library JournalThis moving collection of essays, memoirs, interviews, poetry, fiction, and artwork, an expanded and updated version of materials published in 1986 as a special issue of the journal Sinister Wisdom , traverses national boundaries to present the diversity of Jewish women's experiences and beliefs. Reflections on the Holocaust, Zionism, feminism, and the recent Palestinian uprising are juxtaposed with writing on relationships, identity, and assimilation; traditional songs and celebrations; and translations from Yiddish, Hebrew, and Ladino. The anthology attests to the existence and fruitfulness of a Jewish women's literary and cultural tradition that garners strength by examining rather than suppressing conflicts. With an excellent bibliography, resource materials, and glossary. Highly recommended.-- Deborah Gussman, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, N.J.\ \