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Notes Introduction (pages 1–4) 1. H. Herzog, “Irgunei Nashim ba-Hugim ha-Ezrahiyyim—Perek Nishkakh be-Historiyyografiyya shel ha-Yishuv” [Women’s Organizations in Civilian Circles —A Forgotten Chapter in the Historiography of the Yishuv], Cathedra, 70 (January 1994): 111–13, and also articles by Deborah Bernstein and Yossi BenArtzi in this collection. 2. From the article by Hannan Hever in the Hebrew edition of this volume, p. 393. 3. Y. Atzmon, ed. and intro., Eshnav le-Hayyehen shel Nashim be-Hevrot Yehudiyyot [A View into the Lives of Women in Jewish Societies], (Jerusalem, 1995), pp. 21–23. 4. See the article by Einat Ramon in this volume. 5. Amia Lieblich, “Zipporah Az ve-Akhshav” [Zipporah Then and Now], in ed. Ruth Ravitsky, Kor’ot mi-Bereishit: Nashim Yisra’eliyyot Kotevot al Neshot Seter Bereishit [(Women) Reading from Genesis: Israeli Women Writing about the Women in Genesis] (Tel Aviv, 1999), p. 406. 6. B. Melman, “Min ha-shulayim el ha-historiyah shel ha-Yishuv: Migdar ve-eretz yisre’eliyut (1890–1920)” [From the Periphery to the Center of Yishuv History: Gender and Nationalism in Eretz Israel (1890–1920)], Zion 62, no. 3 (1997): 246. 7. Ibid., 243–78. The Study of Women in Israeli Historiography (pages 7–17) 1. D. Kandiyoti, “Contemporary Feminist Scholarship and Middle East Studies,” in Gendering the Middle East, ed. D. Kandiyoti (London, 1996), p. 9. 2. See, for example, Sh. Rowbotham, Hidden from History (London, 1977); G. Lerner, The Majority Finds Its Past: Placing Women in History (New York, 1979); and many others. J. Wallach Scott, “Women’s History and the Rewriting of History,” in The Impact of Feminist Research in the Academy, ed. Ch. Farnham, pp. 34 –50 (Bloomington, Ind., 1987) (hereafter cited as Scott, “Women’s”); D. Kandiyoti, ed., Gendering the Middle East (London, 1996), p. 9. 3. D. Boyarin, “Neshef ha-Masekhot ha-Koloni’ali: Ziyyonut, Migdar, Hikkui” [The Colonial Masqued Ball: Zionism, Gender, Imitation], Theory and Criticism 11 (1997): 123–44 (hereafter cited as Boyarin, “Colonial”); M. Gluzman, “Ha-Kemihah le-heteroseksu’aliyyut: Ziyyonut u-Miniyyut beAltnoyland ” [The Yearning for Heterosexuality: Zionism and Sexuality in Altneuland], Theory and Criticism 11 (1997): 145–62; D. Biale, Eros and the Jews (New York, 1992), chapter 8; Sh. H. Katz, “Adam and Adama, Ird and Ard: En-gendering Political Conflict and identity in Early Jewish and Palestinian Nationalism,” in Gendering the Middle East, ed. D. Kandiyoti (London, 1996) (hereafter cited as Katz, “Adam”); T. Mayer, ed., Women and the Israeli Occupation (London & New York, 1994), mainly in relation to the period of the Israeli occupation since 1967; J. M. Peteet, “Authenticity and Gender, The Presentation of Culture,” in Arab Women, Old Boundaries, New Frontiers, ed. J. E. Tucker, pp. 49–62 (Bloomington, Ind., 1993). 4. Scott, “Woman’s,” p. 37. 5. Ibid., p. 38. 6. J. W. Scott, Gender and the Politics of History (New York, 1988), p. 27. 7. J. Bennett, “Feminism and History,” Gender and History 1, no. 3 (1989): 58. 8. B. Melman, “Min ha-Shulayyim el ha-Historiyyah shel ha-Yishuv: Migdar ve-Eretz Yisra’eliyyut (1890–1920)” [From the Margins to the History of the Yishuv: Gender and Eretz-Israeliness (1890–1920)], Zion 62, no. 3 (1997): 245. 9. Boyarin, “Colonial,” p. 125. 10. N. Yuval-Davis, “Gender and Nation,” Ethnic and Racial Studies 16, no. 4 (1993): 621–32. 11. Katz, “Adam.” 12. For example, Y. Azmon, ed., Eshnav le-Hayyehen shel Nashim veHevrot Yehudioyyot [A View into the Lives of Women in Jewish Societies], pp. 325–26 (Jerusalem, 1995); Y. Azmon, ed., Ha-Tishma Koli? Yitzugim shel Nashim be-Tarbut ha-Yisra’elit [Will You Listen to My Voice? Representations of Women in Israeli Culture] (Tel Aviv, 2001); T. Elor & T. Rapport, eds., Women Studies International Forum (Special issue) 20, nos. 5/6 (1997); Special issues of Israel Social Science Research on Feminist Theory and Research: Israeli Institutions and Society 12, nos. 1, 2 (1997). 342 Notes [54.160.133.33] Project MUSE (2024-03-28 21:07 GMT) Have Gender Studies Changed Our Attitude toward the Historiography of the Aliyah and Settlement Process? (pages 18–32) 1. We note here the collective publication projects of Yad Yitzhak Ben-Zvi and the Israel Academy for Sciences and Humanities: M. Eliav, ed., Sefer ha-Aliyah ha-Rishonah [The First Aliyah book] (Jerusalem, 1981); Y. Bartal, Z. Tzahor, and Y. Kani’el, eds., Sefer ha-Aliyah ha-Sheniyyah [The Second Aliyah book] (Jerusalem, 1997); also, I. Kollat et...