| #2023927 in Books | Rutgers University Press | 1991-04-01 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 8.50 x.60 x5.51l,.74 | File type: PDF | 262 pages | ||3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.| Not worth the time|By TechScribe|This book is a 20 year old, scholarly look at a subject which has changed dramatically in that time frame. I was expecting more personal insights, which might have kept the book current on an emotional level.|17 of 17 people found the following review helpful.| An insightful read|By Lisa|If you|From Publishers Weekly|A feminist and a sociologist, Kaufman was intrigued by those American ba'alot teshuvah (newly Orthodox Jewish women) who had come of age during the counterculture and the birth of the women's movement but who, in the 1970s and 1980s, embra
"An engrossing account of the appeal of religious orthodoxy to formerly secular women, many of them once feminist, radical members of the counterculture. . . . This outstanding work of scholarship reads with the immediacy of a novel."ÐÐCynthia Fuchs Epstein, author of Deceptive Distinctions: Sex, Gender, and the Social Order
Debra Kaufman writes about ba'alot teshuva women who have returned to Orthodox...
You easily download any file type for your gadget.Rachel's Daughters: Newly Orthodox Jewish Women | Debra Renee Kaufman. Just read it with an open mind because none of us really know.