From The Madwoman in the Attic to The Women's Room : The American Roots of Israeli Feminism
2000; Indiana University Press; Volume: 5; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2979/isr.2000.5.1.266
ISSN1527-201X
Autores Tópico(s)Middle East Politics and Society
ResumoIsraeli feminism had to be reinvented in the 1970s. About half a century had passed since the Suffragettes of Jewish Palestine won the vote in 1920; by the 1970s, intervening events--primarily the Holocaust, the establishment of the State, and its prolonged state of siege--have turned the struggle and the achievements of those "New Hebrew Women" into a dim memory. The familiar images of female soldiers and even a female Prime Minister [who was not a feminist!] did little to change the life and status of "the woman in the street." "From the time of Independence until the Six-Day War (1948-1967) the status of women was, for the most part, a non-issue," is the succinct summary of sociologist Dafna Izraeli in her 1987 Encyclopaedia Judaica feature essay on "The Status of Women in Israel." 3
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