Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 440
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-0-7657-6015-9 • Hardback • September 1998 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
Enid Dame is a poet, writer, and lecturer at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
Lilly Rivlin, a seventh-generation Jerusalemite, is a writer and film-maker specializing in Jewish and international subjects.
Henny Wenkart is the editor of the Jewish Women's Literary Annual.
The editors of this anthology, Dame, Rivlin, and Wenkart, have selected works that are wide-ranging, visionary as well as revisionist, both fierce and lyrical at the same time. Lilith circles above the pages of the volume, flies to the sea, to the desert, and invites us on this wild ride.
— Esther Broner
Indispensable...provacative essays.
— Bridges
This work proves that conjoining Lileth with feminist consciousness has opened a pwoerful chapter in the quest for re-imaging contemporary Jewish women's lives.
— Na'amat Woman
Judaism has a long tradition of reinterpreting its central texts and newer traditions of women seeking their own path. Which Lileth? adds a modern and uniquely female voice to the ancient texts and legends.
— J. The Jewish News Weekly of Northern California
Recommended for women's and Jewish studies collections.
— Library Journal
This is an amazing and wondrous work, quite equal to the task of resurrecting Lilith—one of the great female foremother archetypes, a universal vibration, and role model, if you will, one that has been buried, denied, scorned, misread, feared, by women as well as men, to our own detriment. The pieces are original, complex, very creative, poetic, filled with yearning and bravery. An deeply informative. This is a book I didn't know I needed, but now that it's here, I know she has come at the right time and in the right form. Bravo to editors Dame, Rivlin, and Wenkart. No Jewish or Women's Studies program should be without it. A must-read for theologians, ritualists, mental health professionals, Middle East experts, and, of course, for people of good will.
— Dr. Phyllis Chesler
A must-read for students of feminism, Jewish scripture, women's literature, and anyone restless for a walk on the psyche's wild side.
— Woodstock Times
Fascinating, original, and highly recommended for Judaic studies and women's studies supplemental reading lists.
— The Bookwatch