The Journey Home: Jewish Women and the American Century

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Simon and Schuster, 1997 - Biography & Autobiography - 410 pages
In recent decades, prominent American Jewish women like Bella Abzug and Betty Friedan have made headlines and history, challenging the constraints facing women in American public life. Few realize that these women embody a hundred-year legacy of remarkable activism. From suffrage to birth control, from trade unionism to higher education, from civil rights to feminism to every aspect of popular culture, Jewish women have been in the vanguard, leading key social movements and shaping cultural consciousness. Anarchists and Zionists, "sob sister" writers and Supreme Court justices, rabbis and reformers, personalities as diverse as Emma Goldman, Sophie Tucker and Gertrude Stein have left their indelible mark on the American century. Joyce Antler profiles these women leaders in The Journey Home, interweaving social history with brilliant portraiture. In a fresh and lively narrative, she examines the political conflicts and personal tensions that animated their lives as they redefined the landscapes of American culture and society. To change their nation they battled class and gender prejudice, anti-Semitism, and anti-immigrant fervor. They drew sustenance from Jewish tradition but always took independent stands.

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Contents

On the Edge of the Twentieth Century
1
The Paradox of Immigration
17
Uptown Women and Social and Spiritual Reform
40
Radical Politics and Labor Organizing
73
The Dream of a Jewish Homeland 888
98
Jewish Women in Popular Culture
136
Pioneers in the Professions
176
Entering the Theatres of the World
203
Imagining Jewish Mothers
233
Feminist Liberations
259
Coming Out as Jewish Women
285
Out of Exile
309
When Daughters Are Cherished
328
A Guide to Archival Collections
335
Acknowledgments
387
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