The second volume of The Jewish Political Tradition; this work is concerned with the theme of membership. It brings together important texts on membership topics from 3000 years of Jewish history; many newly translated or translated for the first time. Commentaries from modern religious and secular scholars; representing a range of viewpoints on the right and the left; accompany the texts. Among the contributors are Arthur Isak Applbaum; Ruth Gavison; Moshe Halbertal; Martha Minow; David Novak; Ilana Pardes; Steven B. Smith and Nomi Maya Stolzenberg. They deal with some of the most controversial issues in Jewish life; not only in the past but also at the start of the 21st century.
#896133 in Books 1997-07-21Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.24 x .69 x 5.52l; .66 #File Name: 0300072988256 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy btrimbleVery informative.20 of 21 people found the following review helpful. Groundbreaking work in women's historyBy A CustomerCott argues that the market revolution in early America brought about the creation of a seperate women's "sphere" of domesticity. She further contends that the placement of women in a seperate "private sphere." can be termed the "cult of domesticity" She concludes by making the claim that the cult of domesticity allowed women to forge bonds through churches and fellow homemakers which helped bring about the first femenist movements of the early nineteenth century. The work stands as the primer for the revisionists' view of new women's "anti-victimization" history.5 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Women in the Rise of American CapitalismBy Alfred JohnsonAs I noted previously in a review of Paul E. Johnson's A Shopkeeper's Millennium; an account of the rise of the industrial capitalists of Rochester; New York in the 1830's; in any truly socialist understanding of history the role of the class struggle plays a central role. However; the uneven development of society throughout history has created other forms of oppression that need to be address. In America the question of the special oppression of blacks as a race clearly fits that demand. And everywhere the woman question cries out for solution.Any thoughtful socialist wants to; in fact needs to; know how the various classes in society were formed; and transformed; over time. I have mentioned previously that a lot of useful work in this area has been done by socialist scholars. One thinks of E.P. Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class; for example. One needs to have a sense about the evolution of the forms of woman's oppression; as well. One does not; however; need to be a socialist to do such research in order to provide us with plenty of ammunition in our fight for a better world. One of the great developments of the past thirty or forty years is the dramatic increase in research; led by the feminist resurgence; on woman's history. The book under review here Nancy Cott's study of the role of women in early capitalist America; The Bonds of Womanhood; is an early such addition.I have mentioned in other reviews of this period in American history that the changes from an agrarian/mercantile society as found at the time of the American Revolution to the contours of an industrial society in the Age of Jackson were dramatic and longstanding. This was also the case with the role of women. Women; due to their biological function; have always been central to the cohesion of the family throughout class history. The form that has taken however has varied with changes in the economic superstructure. Thus such occurrences; due to the nature of industrial development; as the decrease in extended families; the dividing of work from the home; the putting out system; the dominance of the male as `breadwinner' and the domestication of women as center of family life had profound changes in the way the family related to the world; the way children were socialized and the way woman subordinated their desires and creativity to the tasks at hand. Sound familiar?Professor Cott makes her case for this observable change by looking at changes of various types of New England families from self-sufficient farmers to producers for the market; etc. She also relies heavily; as all historians of necessity must; on the record left behind by women mainly through their diaries. There are certain methodological problems inherent in that approach and a tendency to generalize off of the relatively small numbers for whom a record survives but nevertheless her early work is the starting place for a better understanding of the crisis in the family that occurred with the rise of capitalism in America.I would note as a sidelight that her digging up various self-help manuals for child-rearing and other domestic responsibilities was quite interesting. Dr. Spock in the last generation and today Oprah and Doctor Phil and their ilk thus come from a long pedigree of those who had something to say about the correct raising of YOUR children. Read on.