
Challenge and Conformity
Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz
(Author)Description
Product Details
Publisher | Littman Library of Jewish Civilization |
Publish Date | March 01, 2021 |
Pages | 336 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781786941718 |
Dimensions | 9.3 X 6.1 X 1.1 inches | 1.4 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
'Challenge and Conformity serves as a rich chronicle of Orthodox British womanhood and the challenge of creating uniquely female Jewish spaces. It is well rooted in history, community context, and robust ethnographic data and will be helpful to bridge the lacuna on British scholarship of religious practices of Jewish women.' Ilana C. Spencer, Religious Studies Review
'Challenge and Conformity serves as a rich chronicle of Orthodox British womanhood and the challenge of creating uniquely female Jewish spaces. It is well rooted in history, community context, and robust ethnographic data and will be helpful to bridge the lacuna on British scholarship of religious practices of Jewish women.' Ilana C. Spencer, Religious Studies Review
'Challenge and Conformity opens up for our understanding a subject of immense importance to Judaism and the Jewish community. The religious lives of Orthodox women is a topic that has previously attracted little research. Taylor-Guthartz approaches it with academic skill and real empathy for the women she interviews and their communities. We learn of the great variety of women's beliefs, customs and practices that are spread across the Orthodox Jewish world and, through Taylor-Guthartz's eyes, we gain a greater understanding and appreciation of Jewish life that might otherwise have remained hidden.'
Neville Teller, The Jerusalem Post
'Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz's in-depth study of the religious experience of Orthodox women raises questions for the rabbinic establishment... an important new book.'
Simon Rocker, The Jewish Chronicle
'Taylor-Guthartz's precise academic writing, interwoven with her own personal knowledge and experience of the community, gives the women represented here agency and authority, exemplifying how traditional groups and practices do not exist at odds with the modern world, or even in parallel, but rather as an integral part of it, adding rich diversity and colour to the pattern of Jewish life today. This is a timely and important treatise, reflecting modern feminist values and shining a light on a previously unexamined segment of the community.'
Noa Gendler, Jewish Renaissance
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