What makes women sick? : maternity, modesty, and militarism in Israeli society

Bibliographic Information

What makes women sick? : maternity, modesty, and militarism in Israeli society

Susan Sered

(Brandeis series on Jewish women)

Brandeis University Press : University Press of New England, c2000

  • : cloth
  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [181]-190) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Scrutinizing the Israeli military, medical, and religious establishments, Susan Sered discloses the myths, policies, and pressures that encumber and endanger Israeli women in their roles as soldiers, brides, and mothers. Framed by the question of why the life expectancy and health status of Israeli women is poor in comparison to women in other developed countries, What Makes Women Sick? conjoins medical anthropology, gender studies, and women's health to show how female bodies in Israel are controlled through public policy, symbolic discourses, and ritual performances. Looking at issues such as disputes over women serving in combat, the rape of a former Miss Israel, and government incentives for bearing children, Sered develops a passionate ethnography of Israeli society that resonates universal truths about women, power, and authority.

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