A Canadian story of Jewish divorce: listening to rabbis across denominations wrestle with egalitarianism and K'lal Yisrael.

IF 0.3 4区 哲学 0 RELIGION STUDIES IN RELIGION-SCIENCES RELIGIEUSES Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Epub Date: 2022-05-06 DOI:10.1177/00084298221095192
Deidre Butler, Betina Appel Kuzmarov
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Abstract

This ethnographic interview-based research (2016-2021) analyzes the narratives of a cohort of rabbis in Ottawa who share their experiences of Jewish divorce. Jewish religious divorce is gendered and asymmetrical where the husband gives the divorce to the passively receiving wife who may not herself initiate divorce. This project interrupts the ways in which Jewish divorce is primarily identified in terms of get abuse in the Orthodox world. The asymmetrical divorce process contributes to get abuse, which includes delaying, refusing, or extorting favourable terms in exchange for the husband providing the wife with her get (religious divorce). Women who cannot secure divorces are known as agunot (singular agunah, chained women), who cannot remarry and who commit adultery if they have sexual relations with another man. Women face the additional burden that if they bear children to anyone other than their husband, such children would have the status of mamzerim (singular mamzer, legally illegitimate, product of an illicit union) who may not marry other Jews except other mamzerim, who may not hold certain positions of communal leadership, and whose status is inherited from generation to generation. This gendered injustice becomes the focus of scholarship even as it arouses both communal activism and internal debates. While get abuse is most common in the Orthodox Jewish community, our interviews with Canadian rabbis reveals that Jewish divorce is a transdenominational phenomenon that plays out within and across denominational boundaries. Against a backdrop of increasing stringency in the Orthodox world transnationally, and intensifying concern for the consequences of inegalitarian Jewish divorce, rabbinic stories point to shifting denominational practice. This transdenominational context is key to understanding Jewish divorce in North America. Attending to Jewish divorce in Canada through a denominational lens does important work in disentangling systemic and local factors. We argue that rabbinic stories about how rabbis engage with divorce reveals how the twin challenges of egalitarianism and rabbinic concerns for the unity and continuity of the Jewish people (K'lal Yisrael) shape the experience of Jewish divorce and divorce practice itself. Jewish divorce impacts women in particularly gendered ways but is largely interpreted and practiced by male rabbis. Through our original theoretical framework of "troubling orthopraxy", we analyse how orthopraxy (correct divorce practice) is conflated with stringency, and how that dynamic pushes and pulls at divorce practice.

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一个关于加拿大犹太人离婚的故事:听不同教派的拉比在平等主义和犹太主义之间角力。
这项基于人种学访谈的研究(2016-2021)分析了渥太华一群拉比的叙述,他们分享了犹太人离婚的经历。犹太宗教离婚是有性别的和不对称的,丈夫把离婚交给被动接受的妻子,她自己可能不会主动提出离婚。这个项目打破了犹太人离婚在东正教世界中主要被认为是受到虐待的方式。不对称的离婚程序导致虐待,包括拖延、拒绝或勒索有利条件,以换取丈夫向妻子提供她的财产(宗教离婚)。无法离婚的女性被称为agunot(单数agunah,被锁住的女性),她们不能再婚,如果与另一个男人发生性关系,就会犯通奸罪。妇女面临的额外负担是,如果她们与丈夫以外的任何人生育孩子,这些孩子将具有mamzerim(单数mamzer,法律上非法的,非法结合的产物)的地位,他们除了与其他mamzerim以外不能与其他犹太人结婚,他们不能担任社区领导的某些职位,他们的地位代代相传。这种性别上的不公正成为学术界关注的焦点,尽管它同时引发了社区行动主义和内部辩论。虽然虐待在正统犹太社区最常见,但我们对加拿大拉比的采访显示,犹太人离婚是一种跨教派现象,在教派边界内和跨教派边界发生。在全球东正教世界日益严格的背景下,以及对不平等的犹太人离婚后果的日益关注,拉比的故事指向了教派实践的转变。这种跨教派的背景是理解北美犹太人离婚的关键。从宗派的角度来看待加拿大的犹太人离婚问题,在理清体制和地方因素方面发挥了重要作用。我们认为,关于拉比如何处理离婚的拉比故事揭示了平等主义的双重挑战和拉比对犹太人的团结和连续性的关注(K'lal Yisrael)如何塑造犹太人离婚的经历和离婚实践本身。犹太人离婚对女性的影响尤其性别化,但主要是由男性拉比来解释和实践。通过我们最初的理论框架“麻烦的正畸”,我们分析了正畸(正确的离婚实践)是如何与严格性混为一谈的,以及这种动态是如何推动和拉动离婚实践的。
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来源期刊
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0.70
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66
期刊介绍: Studies in Religion / Sciences Religieuses is a peer-reviewed, bilingual academic quarterly, serving scholars who work in a wide range of sub-fields in religious studies and theological studies. It publishes scholarly articles of interest to specialists, but written so as to be intelligible to other scholars who wish to keep informed of current scholarship. It also features articles that focus, in a timely and critically reflective manner, on intellectual, professional and institutional issues in the scholarly study of religion, as well as notices that inform scholars of activities and developments in religious studies and theological studies across Canada and throughout the world.
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