ABSTRACT
By interrogating America's promise of a home for Jews as citizens of the liberal state, Jews and Feminism questions the very terms of this social "contract". Maintaining that Jews, women, and Jewish women are not necessarily secure within this construction of the state, Laura Levitt links this contractual construction of belonging and acceptance to legacies of marriage as a contractual home for Jewish women.
Exploring the immigration of Jews from Eastern Europe for America, as well as their desire to make this country their permanent home, Levitt raises questions about the search for stability in specific Jewish religious and cultural traditions which is linked to the liberal academy as well as feminist study, thus offering an account of an ambivalent Jewish feminist embrace of America as home.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |13 pages
Home
chapter |11 pages
Embraces
part |78 pages
Jewish Women at Home
chapter |21 pages
Reading Ketubbot
chapter |12 pages
Becoming Liberal
chapter |11 pages
The Sexual Contract
chapter |14 pages
Marriage as Feminist Theology?
part |27 pages
Feminist Study
chapter |13 pages
Feminist Dreams of Home
chapter |11 pages
Jews in Feminist Study
part |30 pages
Ambivalent Embraces