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  1. Sacrificing the Career or the Family?: Orthodox Jewish Women between Secular Work and the Sacred Home.Chia Longman - 2008 - European Journal of Women's Studies 15 (3):223-239.
    This article addresses the question of women's agency in traditionalist religion, through a study of self-narratives by women in the Orthodox Jewish community of Antwerp, Belgium. Women who study or work outside the boundaries of their community were interviewed about their experiences in negotiating gender ideologies by moving in and between the `secular' and `religious' spaces of higher education, work and home. Various subject positions emerged in terms of either rejecting, separating or reconciling dominant community norms regarding women's proper role (...)
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  • Mothering Fundamentalism: The Transformation of Modern Women into Fundamentalists.Sophia Korb - 2010 - International Journal of Transpersonal Studies 29 (2):68-86.
    Despite upbringings influenced by modern feminism, many women choose to identify with new communities in the modern religious revivalist movement in the United States who claim to represent and embrace the patriarchal values against which their mothers and grandmothers fought. Because women’s mothering is determinative to the family, it is therefore central to transforming larger social structures. This literature review is taken from a study which employed a qualitative design incorporating thematic analysis of interviews to explore how women’s attitudes about (...)
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  • “Doing Religion” In a Secular World: Women in Conservative Religions and the Question of Agency.Orit Avishai - 2008 - Gender and Society 22 (4):409-433.
    Sociological studies of women's experiences with conservative religions are typically framed by a paradox that ponders women's complicity. The prevailing view associates agency with strategic subjects who use religion to further extra-religious ends and pays little attention to the cultural and institutional contexts that shape “compliance.” This paper suggests an alternative framing. Rather than asking why women comply, I examine agency as religious conduct and religiosity as a constructed status. Drawing on a study that examined how orthodox Jewish Israeli women (...)
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