Houses of Study: A Jewish Woman Among BooksTo learn was to live, and to learn well was to live well. This was the lesson of both cultures of the Modern Orthodox Jewish world in which Ilana Blumberg was educated, with its commitment to traditional Jewish practice and ideas alongside an appreciation for modern, secular wisdom. But when the paths of Jewish tradition and secular wisdom inevitably diverge, applying this lesson can become extraordinarily tricky, especially for a woman. Blumberg’s memoir of negotiating these two worlds is the story of how a Jewish woman’s life was shaped by a passion for learning; it is also a rare look into the life of Modern Orthodoxy, the twentieth-century movement of Judaism that tries to reconcile modernity with tradition. Blumberg traces her own path from a childhood immersed in Hebrew and classical Judaic texts as well as Anglo-American novels and biographies, to a womanhood where the two literatures suddenly represent mutually exclusive possibilities for life. Set in “houses of study,” from a Jewish grammar school and high school to a Jerusalem yeshiva for women to a secular American university, her memoir asks, in an intimate and poignant manner: what happens when the traditional Jewish ideal of learning asserts itself in a body that is female—a body directed by that same tradition toward a life of modesty, early marriage, and motherhood? |
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Página 31
When we get there , we will go our separate waysyou to the side of the women
and I to the side of the men ; then I will shut my eyes and pray to God , and you
will shut your eyes and pray to God . We will sit miles from each other at these
times ...
When we get there , we will go our separate waysyou to the side of the women
and I to the side of the men ; then I will shut my eyes and pray to God , and you
will shut your eyes and pray to God . We will sit miles from each other at these
times ...
Página 38
The pages before the fuzziness were my grandfather ' s eyes , or the eyes of a
child not yet born , not yet thought of . Knowing about my grandfather , I felt my
sight a privilege that might at any moment be rescinded . And with it , all the
books .
The pages before the fuzziness were my grandfather ' s eyes , or the eyes of a
child not yet born , not yet thought of . Knowing about my grandfather , I felt my
sight a privilege that might at any moment be rescinded . And with it , all the
books .
Página 117
To be glad to leave the land where God ' s eyes travel always . To elude those
eyes forever . To believe not just that they are unseeing , as the ear is unhearing ,
but to believe that there are no such eyes . There never have been .
To be glad to leave the land where God ' s eyes travel always . To elude those
eyes forever . To believe not just that they are unseeing , as the ear is unhearing ,
but to believe that there are no such eyes . There never have been .
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Crítica de los usuarios - bostonian71 - LibraryThingA literate and literary memoir of a woman who grew up trying to reconcile the worlds of Orthodox Judaism and secularism and feminism. Blumberg explains very well the balancing act she didn't even know ... Leer comentario completo
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