Scapegoat: The Jews, Israel, and Women's LiberationFree Press, 2000 - 436 páginas On Yom Kippur, Jews of antiquity would sacrifice two goats: one killed as an offering to a harsh and judging god, the other taken to the wilderness and turned loose, a carrier of the sins of the group. Throughout history, argues brilliant feminist critic Andrea Dworkin, women and Jews have been stigmatized as society's scapegoats. In this stunning and provocative book, Dworkin brings her rigorous intellect to bear on the dynamics of scapegoating. Drawing upon history, philosophy, literature, and politics, she creates a terrifying picture of the workings of misogyny and anti-Semitism in the last millennium. With examples that range from the Inquisition, when women were targeted as witches and Jews as heretics, to the terror of the Nazis, whose aggression was both race- and gender-motivated, Dworkin illustrates how and why women and Jews have been scapegoated and compares the civil inequality, prejudices, and stereotypes that have framed identity for both groups. Taking the state of Israel as a paradigm, Dworkin traces the growth of male dominance in societies both old and new -- resulting in the subordination of women and a racial or ethnic "other." In Israel today, Palestinians and prostitutes are the new scapegoats: degraded, inferior, abject. Although the gentle Jewish martyrs of old have become modern Israeli warriors, women retain the stigmatized status of "weak Jews" who, when attacked, never fight back. This leads Dworkin to imagine a world in which women betray men of their own kind in order to develop and defend their own sovereignty. Ultimately, her book forces us to ask profound questions: Why do women continue to value their own lives less than those of themen they love? Where is the line between justifiable self-defense and violence? Both an impassioned plea for women to challenge and destroy the author- ity of the men in their own group and a startling work of history, "Scapegoat" will forever change how we think about the patterns of behavior and belief that give rise to domination and oppression. |
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... suffering , the relationship itself being a spiritual paradigm for sadomasochism with the suffering as an em- pirical synonym for chosenness . God's desire , as it were , works itself out in the tormenting of his beloved : the Jews . As ...
... suffering had become exhausted by then and the quota of suffering of others had not . It even turned out that this strange bond that linked Jews with Germans , hence Heine with Goethe , Mendelssohn with Schubert , Marx with Bismarck ...
... suffering creates an abhor- rence of suffering , and God picked the Jews to carry this burden . Gerald Early notes the same moral logic in Afrocentrism : " . . . those black stu- dents confronted me with the conundrum of blackness as ...
Contenido
JewHateWomanHate | 16 |
PogromRape | 35 |
The StateThe Family | 59 |
Derechos de autor | |
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