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The Cambridge Companion to Postmodernism

Edited by Steven Connor

לקטלוג

Avraham Grossman offers a comprehensive study of Jewish women in Europe during the High Middle Ages (1000-1300). Examining multiple aspects of women's lives in medieval Jewish society, Grossman shows that this period saw a distinct improvement in the status of Jewish women in Europe relative to their status during the Talmudic period in the Muslim countries. Two main factors fostered this change: the transformation of Jewish society from agrarian to "bourgeois", with women performing an increasingly important function in the family economy; and the openness toward women in Christian Europe, where they were not subjected to strict limitations based upon conceptions of modesty, as was the case in Muslim countries. The heart of Grossman's book concerns the improvement of Jewish women's lot, and the subsequent efforts of secular and religious authorities to impede their new-found status.

 

Avraham Grossman is professor of Jewish History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, a member of the Israeli National Academy of Sciences, and recipient of the prestigious Israel Prize and Bialik Prize for Jewish Studies.

 

 

The Cambridge Companion to Postmodernism