Lexington Books
Pages: 140
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-9579-7 • Hardback • December 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-9581-0 • Paperback • April 2021 • $44.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-9580-3 • eBook • December 2018 • $42.50 • (£35.00)
Amy K. Milligan is Batten endowed assistant professor of Jewish studies and women's studies at Old Dominion University, where she is also director of the Institute of Jewish Studies and Interfaith Understanding.
Acknowledgements Chapter 1: Introduction: Jews, Gender, and Bodylore
Chapter 2: The Subversive Jewish Feminist Body: Creating Spaces of Protest through Embodiment in Synagogue Life
Chapter 3: Renewing Her Body: Engaging Jewish Women’s Bodies in Synagogue Life
Chapter 4: Rebellious Hair: Jewish Feminist Reinterpretations of the Orthodox Jewish Ritual of Upsherin
Chapter 5: The Rose Winkel: Jewish Navigation of the Reappropriation of a Nazi Symbol by LGBTQ Young Adults
Chapter 6: Queerly Stitched: Religious Garb and LGBTQ Jewish Pride Symbols
Chapter 7: Conclusion: Applications of Jewish Feminist Bodylore
Glossary BibliographyAbout the Author
An interesting book based on original fieldwork. . . The book is well conceived and organized. . . . This reader will look forward to learning from Milligan and those informed by their work how to engage in transformative Jewish feminist and queer bodylore so that our images and experiences as, and of, Jews (such as that the child Lexi discussed in the closing anecdote) can be embodied without essentializing Jews as white, straight, cisgendered, able, Ashkenazi, and middle class.— Contemporary Jewry
Milligan takes an interdisciplinary approach in examining how female and LGBTQ Jews reconceptualize these religious and cultural symbols. . . . recommended for academic collections.
— AJL Newsletter
Amy Milligan's wonderful and clearly written book affirms how illuminating the discipline of folklore can be, with its attentiveness to embodied practice, gender, silenced voices, marginality, and the spiritual creativity of everyday people. Standing respectfully on the shoulders of a range of interdisciplinary scholars, Milligan forges her own contemporary methodologies that allow us to see new and emerging practices in a fresh light. I will surely assign this book in my classes in ethnography, ritual, feminism and religion, and contemporary Judaism. — Vanessa Ochs, University of Virginia
Milligan traces the intersections of queer theory, feminist theory, and bodylore. The effect is not to assemble these discourses into an overarching theoretical approach but to make them bump up against each other, disturbing their essentialisms, assumptions, angles of entry, dominant concerns, and material underpinnings. In her unusually accessible writing, Milligan does not so much argue these juxtapositions and their displacements rhetorically as demonstrate them corporeally in, on, and through the bodies of Jews, queers, and women.— Katharine Young, San Francisco State University