Tova Hartman
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Tova Hartman is the Associate Professor of Law at the Kiryat Ono Academic College. She was formerly Professor of Gender Studies and Education at Bar Ilan University of Ramat Gan,[1] specializing in gender and religion, and gender and psychology. She is the author of a book on Jewish and Catholic mothers, titled Appropriately Subversive, as well as a book on the crossroads of Jewish Tradition and modern feminism, titled Feminism Encounters Traditional Judaism, which won the National Jewish Book Award in 2008. She is a founder of Kehillat Shira Hadasha, a congregation organized to increase women's participation and leadership within traditional Jewish prayer and halakha.[2][3][4] She is the daughter of Rabbi Prof. David Hartman.
See also
- Hebrew University
- Education
- Shira Hadasha
- Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance
- Jewish feminism
- Role of women in Judaism
- Feminist Jewish Ethics
Footnotes
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External links
- Hebrew University School of Education
- Tova Hartman and Tamar Miller, "Our Tradition, Ourselves", JOFA Bulletin, Winter 2001
- Jessica Ravitz, "An Orthodox Feminist Revolutionary", Moment, January/February 2009.
References
- Hartman, T., Appropriately Subversive: Modern Mothers in Traditional Religions, Harvard University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-674-00886-3
- Hartman, T. and Marmon, M., "Lived Regulations, Systemic Attributions Menstrual Separation and Ritual Immersion in the Experience of Orthodox Jewish Women." Gender & Society 18:3, pp. 389–408 (2004)
- "Orthodox Group Fetes Traditional Roles", Forward, May 11, 2001