In this Issue
- Number 36, Spring 5780/2020
- Issue
- JEWISH WOMEN MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS IN EUROPE – BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER THE HOLOCAUST
- Consulting Editor: Miriam Offer
Cofounded in 1998 by the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute at Brandeis University and the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues provides an international, interdisciplinary academic forum the only one of its kind for the innovative work being done in the many areas of research that comprise the field of Jewish women's and gender studies. It regularly includes articles on literature, text studies, anthropology, theology, contemporary thought, sociology, the arts, and more. It aims to create communication channels within the Jewish women's and gender studies community, to bring the fruits of that community's work to a wider audience, and to enhance their educational, political, and cultural impact on the Jewish world and beyond. In addition, each issue of Nashim highlights the new voices that seek to redefine the place of women in the Jewish tradition and Jewish learning in ways that incorporate female creativity and spirituality.
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Indiana University Pressviewing issue
Number 36, Spring 5780/2020Table of Contents
- Nursing in the Theresienstadt Ghetto
- pp. 60-85
- Anna Braude-Heller, Seen from a Distance
- pp. 117-132
- Jewish Female Medical Defiance in Block 10
- pp. 133-158
- The Many Hats of Dr. Krystyna Modrzewska
- pp. 177-204
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