Women and Hasidism: A “Non-Sectarian” Perspective.

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  • Author(s): Wodziński, Marcin
  • Source:
    Jewish History. Dec2013, Vol. 27 Issue 2-4, p399-434. 36p. 1 Illustration.
  • Additional Information
    • Subject Terms:
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      Hasidism has often been defined and viewed as a sect. By implication, if Hasidism was indeed a sect, then membership would have encompassed all the social ties of the “sectarians,” including their family ties, thus forcing us to consider their mothers, wives, and daughters as full-fledged female hasidim. In reality, however, women did not become hasidim in their own right, at least not in terms of the categories implied by the definition of Hasidism as a sect. Reconsideration of the logical implications of the identification of Hasidism as a sect leads to a radical re-evaluation of the relationship between the hasidic movement and its female constituency, and, by extension, of larger issues concerning the boundaries of Hasidism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]