Women We Love!
A Time for Travel
Summer? Summer is the time that you eat sticky popsicles, ride your bike to the beach, and watch fireworks, right? Oh wait, I think summer is the time that you have to plan six months in advance to find a single weekend that you can go away with your friends because everyone is off traveling. Yes, even this year, with gas prices sky-high. And we are not without good company. Jewish women have made it their business to see the world for hundreds of years.
Book Review: The Book of Dahlia
The Book of Dahlia, by Elisa Albert (Free Press, 2008)
A week into the Jewesses With Attitude Summer Reading List, and I’ve finished The Book of Dahlia and am about halfway through Away. So far, good picks, if I do say so myself.
Annie Londonderry's Wild Ride
Since leaving my 5th floor walkup apartment
building and graduating to a home with enough space for a bicycle, I have been
a woman obsessed. Riding my bike is
faster, cleaner, and way more fun than riding the subway or the bus. Apparently, I am not the first Jewish woman
in Boston to
feel this way. Tomorrow marks the 114th
Funny Fanny's Ziegfield Debut
Ah, Fanny Brice. The name alone evokes the image of a Jewish woman on-stage in glamorous costume, making fun of herself. Well, that and, of course, Barbra Streisand singing “People.” This week marks the 98th anniversary of Ms. Brice’s iconic debut in Ziegfield’s Follies as “Sadie Salome,” her breakthrough role.
A Shout-Out to Dr. Gerda Lerner
“Women’s history is women’s right – an essential, indispensable heritage from which we can draw pride, comfort, courage, and long-range vision.” So Dr. Gerda Lerner was quoted in the official memorandum from President Jimmy Carter making Women’s History Week (which has later become Women’s History Month) a national event.
Where are her ovaries now? Chat with Rivka Solomon

Jewesses With Attitude recently reconnected with Rivka Solomon,
the founder and visionary of That
Takes Ovaries (TTO) and recipient of the Jewish Women's Archive's Women Who
Dared award.
A shuk of stories
Today is the 60th anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel, and I'd like to mark it not (only) by eating falafel but with something less tangible but ultimately more nourishing: considering stories. Sixty years is only half way to 120 - the mythical age Jews wish upon one another - but this "half life" contains within it so many dreams and visions, loves and losses, hopes and fears, connections and fractures, struggles that remain unresolved. So many stories - I picture them jostling for
Emma's Revolution!
It's unlikely that Emma Goldman predicted her legacy would inspire the name of an activist folk music duo, but perhaps she did. Over the weekend, I had the delight of seeing Emma's Revolution, a "musical uprising of truth and hope from award-winning, activist songwriters" perform with feminist folk music pioneer Holly Near.
Happy Jewish American Heritage Month!
What
connects the Statue of Liberty with Emma Lazarus? Susan Sontag with Gilda
Radner? Patriotism with labor protests? Musical theatre and domestic ritual
with potato kugel and halvah? You guessed it: JEWISH AMERICAN HERITAGE!
'WomenGirlsLadies' ... Fishnets, Food, Feminism
Are younger generations of women "afraid" of feminism? Has the media slashed and distorted women's choices about balancing work and family? Must women vote for female candidates?



