Stepmothers, from sinister stereotype to contemporary counter-narratives. Campus anti-Semitism in North Carolina, then and now. How boredom in shul was an unlikely career booster. Two daughters report on what they learned from their mothers’ conflicts. Summer fiction to keep you suitably distracted. What does holding a door have to do with gender and power? (Guess again!) And Diane Arbus through a different lens.
Rochelle Newman
Unable to stop sobbing after her mother dies, Newman follows a friend’s “spa spa spa” prescription to understand her mother’s secrets.
Miriam Bat-Ami
Sometimes insights into our relationships come late. As a child, Bat-Ami desperately wanted to be one of her mother’s beloved plants, and now knows she feared being rooted.
Alice Sparberg Alexiou
The state making news for gender bias in 2016 is staying in character. Seventy-five years ago, anti-Semitism was a preferred prejudice in North Carolina.
Arielle Silver
What's it like for this thirtysomething Jew raising stepdaughters? Silver tells the girls her own stories, then learns some truths from other stepmothers coming out from under the sinister stereotype.
To keep you suitably distracted.
Poetry by Jamie Wendt
Poetry by K. P. Kupper
The Housewives of Higher Education
An Irony of Inclusivity
Shiva for Film Force Ronit Elkabetz
Paradoxically, Sex Abuse at Camp May Not Always “Feel Bad”
More Orthodox Women as Rabbis (We Could Get Used to This!)
Now, Reconstructionist Rabbis Can Be Married to Non-Jews
Gender, Power and…Door-Holding
Is It OK to Watch a Woody Allen Film?
Elections: It’s Not Just About Hillary
Ever Been Called Shrill? Strident? A Diva? Getting Mad Is Healthy!
Mind the Gap If You’re a Woman Returning to Work
When We Call Women Girls