Reading the Resisting Woman as “Other”

By :  Shira D. Epstein Former Dean of the William Davidson School, JTS Posted On Feb 22, 2021 / 5781 | Monday Webinar The Other in ñ Text and Tradition

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Part of the series “The ‘Other’ in ñ Text and Tradition”

This session is generously sponsored by Diane Troderman; Lori and Michael Gilman; and Jane and Rabbi Jerome M. Epstein in honor of Dean Shira D. Epstein.

Who has the right to anger? When is defiance cast as positive in our texts and when is it silenced? We will explore the Vashti narrative through the lens of power dynamics, status shifts, performing of gendered emotions, and as an example of reading the resisting woman as “Other.”

ABOUT THE SERIES

We live in a time of such polarization—political, racial, economic, religious—that the gaps between us sometimes feel insurmountable. But this is not a new condition for Jews, either within or outside of the ñ community. This webinar series will explore those gaps between “us” and “the other”: Israelites and other ancient peoples; men and women in the Bible and Talmud; Jews by birth and Jews by choice; the founders of Hasidim and their opponents; Israelis and Palestinians; and more. 

From the ancient Near East to the American civil rights movement; from medieval philosophers to contemporary ñ educators: how have Jews related to those we define as “other,” and how have we marginalized sub-groups within the ñ community? What is our obligation to those we perceive as different? How have Jews challenged communal norms from within? JTS scholars guide us in an intellectual journey through ñ history and text to understand how these gaps have been understood and, at times, bridged.

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