It has been barely 40 years since rabbinical seminaries began ordaining women as rabbis. But women have played a role in Jewish religious leadership from the days of the Bible and even before. Miriam the Prophetess and Deborah the Judge are just the two most prominent of these women, most of whose names are lost to history. The Hebrew Priestess tells the stories of these women, often reading between the lines of the Bible and Talmud to rediscover the women that rabbinic editors tried to erase. The authors bring a unique vantage point: They are founders of the Kohenet Institute, which trains Jewish women as religious leaders - as Hebrew priestesses. They believe the spiritual gifts of Jewish women cannot be incorporated into Judaism unless women explore the Divine through their own lens. The Kohenet Institute offers an embodied, ecstatic earth-based approach to Jewish spiritual practice and leadership. The Hebrew Priestess weaves together a careful examination of historical antecedents of these new priestesses, along with the personal experiences of women who embarked on this new path of Jewish priestesshood. The Hebrew Priestess delineates 13 models of spiritual leadership - among them prophetess, weaver, drummer, shrinekeeper, midwife, mother, maiden, witch, and fool - and shows how each model was manifest in ancient times, its continuation through Jewish history, and how women in our day are following that path. Finally, it shows how you can incorporate part of that path into your own life. Ambitious, erudite, practical, and deeply personal, the Hebrew Priestsess offers a deep connection to Jewish history and to profound holy experiences today. "A very readable and much-needed book " -Starhawk "An extraordinary and amazing work." -Alicia Ostriker "A book to savor." -Max Dashu "The articulation of my dreams and longings." -Rabbi Shefa Gold "Read this book, but don't stop there-live it as well " -Rabbi Rami Shapiro"
Examines technology's effect on the role of women, looks at the increased opportunities for women after the turn of the century, and discusses the suffrage movement.
Chinese edition of "Three Guineas"by Virginia Woolf.
Hilary McPhee's Other People's Words is another recent feminist autobiography . It is not primarily an account of an activist's life within the women's movement as such , so is therefore outside the scope of this study .
Telling Tales: Short Stories
Our Hero Has Bad Breath
Presents nineteen early stories by Louisa May Alcott, the nineteenth-century writer famous for "Little Women," including several thrillers that she kept from being republished in her lifetime.
The Politics of Women's Mobilization in the United States: Resources, Opportunities and Political Process
See also editors Katharine Meyer Graham 105–106 Eleanor Medill Patterson 200 Gloria Steinem 241–242 Puck (statue) 118 Pugh, Sarah 285 Puritan doctrine 121 Putnam, George P. 76 Q 414 INDEX R race issues. See also civil rights in.
367–401 ; Frank Stafford and Greg Duncan , “ The Use of Time and Technology by Households in the United States , ” working paper ( Ann Arbor : University of Michigan , ISR , 1977 ) ; John P. Robinson , “ Changes in American's Use of ...
Eighteenth Century Women Playwrights: Susanna Centlivre