AN INTERNATIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF
AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL WRITING BY JEWISH WOMEN 2004
By Irena Klepfisz and Helen Epstein
Recent years have witnessed a growing interest in memoir as a genre on the parts of the international publishing industry as well as the academy, where memoir is now a frequent focus of non-fiction courses. Memoirs by Jewish women have been very much a part of this trend. Increasingly, scholars are examining the autobiographical writings of women rabbis, politicians, physicians. psychologists, community leaders and artists, and literary figures for a greater understanding of Jewish life.
As Jewish women writers, we have both been asked to lecture on Jewish women’s memoir and are confronted with the lack of a definitive anthology that is inter-national (including Europe, Israel, South America, North and South Africa and the U.S.) and inclusive of all parts of the community (observant and secular; lesbian and heterosexual; Ashkenazi. Mizrachi and Sephardi). We are particularly interested in texts that are out of print and texts which have not yet been translated into English but that we can translate ourselves. In 2002 we were funded by what was then the Hadassah International Research Institute on Jewish Women to begin work on a bibliography.
We have selected an international group of authors and texts and annotated them, thereby opening up a resource through which scholars might address such questions as: when did Jewish women begin writing memoirs and why? In what contexts did they locate their lives? Did they view themselves as exceptions or, as Mary Antin saw it, representatives of "unwritten lives?" We hope that this annotated bibliography, which we view as an evolving resource for general readers as well as for the many Jewish reading groups across the country, will also provide a valuable tool for students and teachers in Jewish Studies, History, Sociology and Literature courses.
We have chosen to include only book length autobiographies. In addition, because there is so much Holocaust material, we reviewed only the “classics” and a few other special memoirs. We have, however, included articles, personal essays, and anthologies of work by women from under-represented groups, most particularly Sephardi/Mizrachi women and Lesbians.
Memoirs included here describe Jewish women’s lives in 25 countries: Austria; Canada; Chile; Cuba; Czechoslovakia; England; France; Germany; Greece; Hungary; India;
Israel; Lebanon; Lithuania; Netherlands; Palestine; Poland;
Russia; South Africa; Spain; Soviet Union; Switzerland
Syria; Turkey; U.S.) and are written in 10 languages:
German,_Hebrew,__Russian,_Spanish_and_Yiddish.'>Czech, Dutch, English, Farsi, French, German, Hebrew,
Russian, Spanish and Yiddish.
We tried to describe rather than review the literature although inevitably judgments were made. We were particularly interested in Jewish women who were in some way activists or involved in Jewish, women’s and general political movements; in women who were involved in the arts and in the sciences. Psychoanalysts and psychotherapists are strongly represented.
We have created 239 keywords which allow researchers to be
as detailed as possible.
The bulk of the material—despite our best efforts—is Ashkenazi, secular, heterosexual, middle class. We do not repeat these words—instead we identify Sephardi, observant (Hassidim, Orthodox, Traditional), lesbian, and working class (class—whenever this is an issue).
Helen Epstein and Irena Klepfisz
To facilitate research and to make continuation of the project on the internet easier, we have established the following Keywords (239)
1950s
1960s
Abortion
Academia
Activism
Adolescence
African American
Agunah
AIDS
Anglo Jewry
Anthropology
Anti-Racism
Anti-Semitism
Apartheid
Art
Ashkenazim
Assimilation
Austria
Baltimore
Berkeley
Berlin
Bialik, H. N.
Birobizan
Black Power Movement
Bobriusk
Bombay
Booksellers
Boston
Brecht, Bertolt
Bronx
Brooklyn
Budapest
Buddhism
California
Cambridge
Canada
Catholics
Chagall, Marc
Child Psychology
Childlessness
Chile
Civil Rights Movement
Class
Cleveland
Cochin
Communism
Conservative
Court Jews
Cracow
Cuba
Czechoslovakia
Death
Deganya
DP Camps
Drug Addiction
Dutch
Early Feminism
East Coast
Education
England
Etsel Groups
Family Violence
Farsi
Fashion
Father-Daughter Relationship
Feminism
Feminist Theory
Food
France
Frankfurt
Free Love
French
Freud, Sigmund
Friendship
German
German Jews
Germany
Greece
Gulag
Halakha
Hamburg
Haskalah
Hebrew
Hebrew Literature
Hidden Children
Holidays
Hollywood
Holocaust
Homophobia
Hungarian Jews
Hungary
Immigrants
India
Indian Military Service
Intermarriage
International
Interracial Marriage
Iran
Iranian Women
Isareli/Palestinian Conflict
Israel
Israeli Feminism
Israeli/Palestinian Conflict
Janina
Jazz
Jewish Food
Jewish Identity
Jewish Labor Bund
Jewish Renewal
Jewish Women of Color
Jewish Youth
Journalism
Kibbutz Life
Kindertransport
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