From Fashion to Politics: Hadassah and Jewish American Women in the Post World War II Era (Out of the Series)

From Fashion to Politics: Hadassah and Jewish American Women in the Post World War II Era (Out of the Series)

by ShirliBrautbar (Author)

Synopsis

Hadassah, the Women's Zionist organization of America, has wielded power in the halls of American political institutions and in the minds of many Jews in the United States. This book enriches our understanding of both modern Jewish history and American women's history. Hadassah is important not only for what it tells us about women but also for what it reveals about Jewish history and politics, about Zionism, and about America. In the postWorld War II era, Hadassah played a significant role in shaping Jewish women's political action and identity. Widely known for its work in Israel, Hadassah played a central role in shaping the way generations of American Jewish women thought about themselves and about their involvement on the American political scene.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 154
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Published: 30 Oct 2013

ISBN 10: 1618112953
ISBN 13: 9781618112958

Media Reviews
Not only fashion and politics, but scholarship, gender, religion, discrimination - every hot button issue is examined in the story of the triumphant rise of Hadassah. A fascinating and important book.--Rabbi David Wolpe
In her history of Hadassah in the postwar period, Brautar shows how a very narrow definition of the political has constrained the scholarship on the US Jewish women's Zionist organization. She demonstrates how Hadassah actively influenced US sentiment and policy on the new state of Israel, communism, civil rights, and Soviet Jewry. Her study also illuminates larger questions, such as how Zionism moved from a peripheral ideological position among US Jews to a mainstay in much of US Jewish life. [...] Brautbar demonstrates why Hadassah, as the largest US Zionist organization, deserves continued attention [...] Recommend. All academic levels/libraries. --S.E. Imhoff, Indiana University
By reevaluating Hadassah's philanthropic mission, public service work, educational efforts, and rhetoric in the context of world and domestic events, Brautbar presents a revisionists history that questions further the accuracy of the idea, popularized by the waves metaphor, that the postwar period was a nadir in feminist history. . . . Through painstaking research in the minutia of daily operations, Brautbar is able to relate Hadassah's aspirations to become an important force in domestic politics and foreign affairs. --Kathleen A. Laughlin The American Jewish Archives Journal 2013 Vol. LXV Nos. 1 & 2
Brautbar is at her best in depicting Hadassah's use of traditional gender roles to promote effective participation by women in the public sphere...'s achievements, both for American Jewish women and for Israel, from [this] thoughtful [book].--Roselyn Bell Hadassah
Author Bio
Dr. Brautbar received her B.A. in Middle Eastern Studies and Applied History at Carnegie Mellon University, her M.A. in Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago, and her Ph.D in History from the University of Southern California. She is Assistant Professor of History at Nevada State College and winner of the Nevada State College iTeach Heritage award. Professor Brautbar has published articles in her research areas of: Jewish women's history, Zionism, and political movements. She serves on the academic review board of the Intermountain West Journal of Religious Studies.