Assyrians 4 Christ
Jewish Domestic Abuse

Bibliography

Covering Jewish Domestic Abuse, Religion and Abuse, and Related Issues.

A guide for clergy on the problems of domestic violence (1987). Trenton, NJ: New Jersey Department of Community Affairs.

Agus, I. A. (1970). Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg. New York: KTAV Publishing House.

Aiken, L. (1992). To be a Jewish woman. Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson, Inc.

Alsdurf, J. M. (1985a). Wife abuse and Christian faith: An assessment of the Church's response. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, CA.

Alsdurf, J. M. (1985b). Wife abuse and the Church: The response of pastors. Response to the Victimization of Women and Children, 8, 9-11.

Alsdurf, J. M., & Alsdurf, P. (1988). A pastoral response. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 165-171). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Alsdurf, P., & Alsdurf, J. M. (1988). Wife abuse and scripture. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 221-227). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Antonelli, J. S. (1995, Dec. 15). Jewry 'must get real' about spousal abuse: Advocates. Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle, XVIII (48), p. 11.

Baker, A. (1993). The Jewish woman in contemporary society: Transitions and traditions. London: Macmillan.

Barnett, B. H. (1993, Sept. 24). Toward a shelter for our battered women. Miami Jewish Tribune.

Barnett, O. W., & LaViolette, A. D. (1993). It could happen to anyone: Why battered women stay. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

Blum, J. (1992, Sept.). Domestic violence in the North American Jewish community: Issues and communal programs. New York: Department of Planning and Resource Development, in conjunction with the Council of Jewish Federations.

Blum-Cogan, L. (1991, Winter). Jewish community response to family abuse, Denver, Colorado. Lilith, 17(1), 7, 33.

Blumenthal, D. R. (1992). Who is battering whom? Conservative Judaism, 45, 72-89.

Bonner, N. (1996, May 24). Rabbis quietly counsel congregants for wife abuse, study finds. Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. XIX (20), 3.

Borden, M. E. (1988, Summer). Our silent shame. Reform Judaism, p. 9.

Bowker, L. H. (1982). Battered women and the clergy: An evaluation. Journal of Pastoral Care, 36, 226-234.

Bowker, L. H. (1988). Religious victims and their religious leaders: Services delivered to one thousand battered women by the clergy. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 229-234). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Brinkerhoff, M. B., Grandin, E., & Lupri, E. (1992). Religious involvement and spousal violence: The Canadian case. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 31, 15-31.

Brodbar-Nemzer, J. Y. (1986). Marital relationships and self-esteem: How Jewish families are different. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 48, 89-98.

Brown, N. (1982, Dec. 5). Relationships: Wife abuse in Jewish families. New York Times.

Bruck, S. (1995, October 26). Rabbis lead the way in battle against domestic violence. Ohio Jewish Chronicle, p. 3.

Bulka, R. P. (1993). Intimacy and sexuality: Judeo-psychological insights. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 17, 103-11.

Capps, D. (1992). Religion and child abuse: Perfect together. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 31, 1-14.

Carroll, J. C. (1980). A cultural-consistency theory of family violence in Mexican-American and Jewish-Ethnic groups. In M. A. Straus & Gerald T. Hotaling (Eds.), The social causes of husband-wife violence (pp. 68-81). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence (Producer) (1994). Broken vows: Religious perspectives on domestic violence [Film]. Seattle, WA: Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence.

Cherlin, A., & Celebuski, C. (1983). Are Jewish families different? Some evidence from the General Social Survey. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 45, 903-910.

Cohen, S. S. (1994). Thoughts on Shalom Bayis: A fresh and ancient philosophy. Tikkun, 9(1), 93.

Cox, J. L. (1989). Karma and redemption: A religious approach to family violence. Journal of Religion and Health, 28, 16-25.

Cwik, M. S. (1995). Couples at risk? A feminist exploration of why spousal abuse may develop within Orthodox Jewish marriages. Family Therapy, 22, 165-183.

DeBeer, E. R. (1988, Summer). Wife abuse, drugs, and silence. Lilith, 20, 6-9.

"Domestic Violence Month" (1995, Dec. 8). Jewish Press, XLV(49), 8.

Druckerman, P. (1994, July 15). Jewish agencies improve services for abused women, but fallout from O.J. Simpson case indicates denial of violence by Jews. Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle, pp. 1, 15.

Dubowsky, H. (1993, Winter). A Chicago haven for Jewish battered women. Lilith, 18(1), 32-33.

Duncan, E. (1983). The hungry Jewish mother. In S. Heschel (Ed.), On being a Jewish feminist: A reader (pp. 26-39). New York: Schocken.

Eisikovits, Z. C., Guttman, E., Sela-Amit, M., & Edleson, J. L. (1993). Woman battering in Israel: The relative contributions of interpersonal factors. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 63, 313-317.

El-Or, T. (1993). The length of the slits and the spread of luxury: Reconstructing the subordination of Ultra-Orthodox Jewish women through the patriarchy of men scholars. Sex Roles, 9/10, 585-598.

Featherman, J. M. (1995). Jews and sexual child abuse. In L. A. Fontes (Ed.), Sexual abuse in nine North American Cultures: Treatment and Prevention (pp. 128-155). London: Sage Publications.

Feiler, A. H. (1992, Nov. 20). A house divided: Long denied as someone else's problem, domestic violence has hit home in the Jewish community. Baltimore Jewish Times, pp. 54-59.

Fertel, N. S., & Feuer, E. G. (1981). Treating marital and sexual problems in the Orthodox Jewish community. Journal of Psychology Judaism, 5, 85-94.

Finkelstein, L. (1972). Jewish self-government in the middle ages. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

Fortune, M. F. (1989). The transformation of suffering: A Biblical and theological perspective. In J. C. Brown & C. R. Bohn (Eds.), Christianity, patriarchy, and abuse: A feminist critique (pp. 147-139). New York: Pilgrim Press.

Fortune, M. M., & Hertze, J. (1991). A commentary on religious issues in family violence. In M. D. Pellauer, B. Chester, & J. A. Boyajian (Eds.), Sexual assault and abuse: A handbook for clergy and religious professionals (pp. 67-83). San Francisco: HarperSanFranscisco.

Frankel, E. (1990). The promises and pitfalls of Jewish relationships. Tikkun, 5(5), 19-22, 95-98.

Friedrich, J. (1988). A model program for training religious leaders to work with abuse. . In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 181-187). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Frishtik, M. (1991). Physical and sexual violence by husbands as a reason for imposing a divorce in Jewish law. Jewish Law Annual, 9, 145-169.

Frishtik, M. (1990). Violence against women in Judaism. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 14, 131-153.

Ganzfried, S. (1989). Code of Jewish law: Kitzur Shulhan Arukh. New York: Hebrew Publishing.

Gilbreath, S., & Hoenig, M. (1968). Rabbis and pastoral counseling. Journal of Pastoral Care, 22, 28-33.

Giller, B. (1990). All in the family: Violence in the Jewish home. Women and Therapy, 10, 101-109.

Giller, B., & Goldsmith, E. (1980). All in the family: A study of intra-familial violence in the Los Angeles Jewish community. Unpublished master's thesis, Hebrew Union College, Los Angeles, CA.

Gluck, B. (1988). Jewish men and violence in the home - Unlikely companions? In H. Brod (Ed.), A mensch among men: Explorations in Jewish masculinity (pp. 162-173). Freedom, CA: Crossing Press.

Gochros, H. L. (1986). The Jewish people and their sexuality. Journal of Social Work and Human Sexuality, 4, 99-119.

Goldberg, B. (1991, May 3). Has the Jewish family really changed? Sh'ma, 101-102.

Goldberg, L. (1993, Winter). Surviving incest in a Holocaust family. Lilith, 18(1), 20, 23.

Goldsmith, E. (1983-84, Winter). Violence in the Jewish family. Reform Judaism, pp. 20-21.

Goldstein, I. (1981). Jewish justice and conciliation: History of the Jewish Conciliation Board of America, 1930-1968, and a review of Jewish juridical autonomy. New York: KTAV Publishing House.

Goshen-Gottstein, E. R. (1987). Mental health implications of living in an Ultra-Orthodox Jewish subculture. Israel Journal of Psychiatry and Related Sciences, 24, 145-166.

Gozansky, T. (1993, Spring). Rape on kibbutz. Lilith, 18(2), 5.

Graetz, N. (1991). Miriam: Guilty or not guilty? Judaism, 40, 184-192.

Graetz, N. (1995). Rejection: A rabbinic response to wife beating. In T. M. Rudavsky (Ed.), Gender and Judaism: The transformation of tradition (pp. 13-23). New York: New York University Press.

Graetz, N. (1992). The Haftarah tradition and the metaphoric battering of Hosea's wife. Conservative Judaism, 45, 29-42.

Graham, L. K., & Fortune, M. M. (1993). Empowering the congregation to respond to sexual abuse and domestic violence. Pastoral Psychology, 41, 337-345.

Green, L. (1993, Winter). An incest survivor reclaims her place in the Jewish community. Lilith, 18(1), 21-22.

Greenberg, B. (1994, July 12). A crime against G-d, too. New York Times, p. A11.

Grossman, A. (1991). Medieval rabbinic views on wife-beating, 800-1300. Jewish History, 5, 53-62.

Guterman, N. B. (1993). Confronting the unknowns in Jewish family violence: A call for knowledge development. Journal of Jewish Communal Service, 70, 26-33.

Hahn, D. F. (1992). Soviet Jewish Refugee women: Searching for security. In Refugee Women and Their Mental Health (pp. 79-87). New York: Haworth Press.

Harris, B. (1988). Needs of the Jewish abuse victim. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 133-135). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Herrenkohl, E. C. (1978, July). Parallels in the process of achieving personal growth by abusing parents through participation in group therapy programs or in religious groups. Family Coordinator, pp. 279-282.

Horsburgh, B. (1995, Spring). Lifting the veil of secrecy: Domestic violence in the Jewish community. Harvard Women's Law Journal, 18, 171-217.

Horton, A. L. (1988). Practical guidelines for professionals working with religious spouse abuse victims. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 89-99). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Horton, A. L., Wilkins, M. M., & Wright, W. (1988). Women who ended abuse: What religious leaders and religion did for these victims. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 235-246). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Hulme, T. S. (1974). Mental health consultation with religious leaders. Journal of Religion and Health, 13, 114-127.

Hurwitz, S. (1938). The Responsa of Solomon Luria (Maharshal). New York: Bloch Publishing.

Ingram, B. L., & Lowe, D. (1989). Counseling activities and referral practices of rabbis. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 13, 133-148.

Jacobs, L., & Dimarsky, S. B. (1991-92). Jewish domestic abuse: Realities and responses. Journal of Jewish Communal Service, 68, 94-113.

Jaffa, S. (1991-92). A model child abuse prevention program. Journal of Jewish Communal Service, 68, 114-122.

"Jewish women talk about surviving incest" (1991). Bridges, 2, 26-34.

Jolles, A. (1988, November). Family violence and community silence. The Jewish Monthly, pp. 17, 19-20.

Kagan, H. E. (1954). The role of the rabbi as counselor: The dilemma of the rabbi-counselor in helping persons find "the courage to be" comes from the peculiar dual role which he occupies. Pastoral Psychology, 5, 17-23.

Kasser, J. (1991, May 3). Child abuse in the Jewish family. Sh'ma, 99-101.

Kaufman, G., & Raphael, L. (1987). Shame: A perspective on Jewish identity. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 11, 30-40.

Kleiman, S. (1992, Spring). Israel's abused children. Lilith 17(2), 6.

Kramer, C. (1990). An historical perspective on domestic violence. Jewish Social Work Forum, 26, 51-56.

Kramer, W. M. (1994, Fall). Denial of spousal abuse the Jewish problem. Jewish Spectator, 59(2), 6-7.

Levin, S. (1977). A battered people syndrome? Judaism, 26, 217-221.

Levinson, D. (1989). Family violence in cross-cultural perspective. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

Linzer, N. (1986). Institution and choice: The rabbi as marriage counselor. Conservative Judaism, 38, 80-86.

Martin, S. E. (1989). Research note: The response of the clergy to spouse abuse in a suburban county. Violence and Victims, 4, 217-225.

Master, L. (1989). Jewish experiences of Alcoholics Anonymous. Smith College Studies in Social Work, 59, 183-199.

Morell, S. (1982). An equal or a ward: How independent is a married woman according to Rabbinic law? Jewish Social Studies, 44, 189-210.

NCJW (1981). Domestic violence: An NCJW response. New York: National Council of Jewish Women.

Neufeld, K. (1979). Child-rearing, religion, and abusive parents. Religious Education, 74, 234-244.

Olitzky, K. M. (1994). Moving from codependency to covenant: A spiritual counseling model for the Jewish community. Journal of Ministry in Addiction and Recovery, 1, 33-39.

Orenstein, D. (1988, Summer). How Jewish law views wife beating. Lilith, 20, 9.

Ostrov, S. (1978). Sex therapy with Orthodox Jewish couples. Journal of Sex and marital Therapy, 4, 266-278.

Papa, M. B. (1980, June 6). Abused women: Clergy, Church cannot cope. National Catholic Reporter, 16, 1, 13.

Pagelow, M. D., & Johnson, P. (1988). Abuse in the American family: The role of religion. In A. L. Horton, & J. A. Williamson (Eds.), Abuse and religion: When praying isn't enough (pp. 1-12). Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Pellauer, M. D. (1991). A theological perspective on sexual assault. In M. D. Pellauer, B. Chester, & J. A. Boyajian (Eds.), Sexual assault and abuse: A handbook for clergy and religious professionals (pp. 84-95). San Francisco: HarperSanFranscisco.

Pellauer, M. D., Chester, B., & Boyajian, J. (Eds.) (1991). Sexual assault and abuse: A handbook for clergy and religious professionals. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco.

Rakover, N. (1985). Coercion in conjugal relations. Jewish Law Association Studies, 1, 103-119.

Rockman, H. (1993). Sex shmex - as long as you love your wife: A review of the laws and guidelines regarding sexual behaviour among Orthodox Jews. Sexual and Marital Therapy, 8, 255-267.

Rosen, I. J. (1989). Substance abuse in the American Jewish community. Jewish Social Work Forum, 25, 58-71.

Roth, H. A. (1982). From whence the authority of the rabbi to comfort and counsel? In E. L. Stevens (Ed.), Rabbinic authority: Papers presented before the ninety-first annual convention of the Central Conference of American Rabbis (vol. XC, Part 2, pp. 95-98). New York: Central Conference of American Rabbis.

Ruether, R. R. (1989). The western religious tradition and violence against women in the home. In J. C. Brown & C. R. Bohn (Eds.), Christianity, patriarchy, and abuse (pp. 31-41). New York: Pilgrim Press.

Saunders, S. (1982, April). A study of domestic violence: Battered women in Israel. Pamphlet No. 63. London: Anglo-Israel Association.

Scarf, M. (1988). Battered Jewish wives: Case studies in the response to rage. New York: Edwin Mellon Press.

Scarf, M. (1983). Marriages made in heaven? Battered Jewish wives. In S. Heschel (Ed.), On being a Jewish feminist: A reader (pp. 51-64). New York: Schocken.

Schaffer, S. (1984). Halachic consideration in marriage counseling and sex therapy. Journal of Halacha and Contemporary Society, 7, 53-66.

Schneider, S. W. (1986). Why Jewish women get raped: Lilith interviews Pauline Bart. Lilith, 15, 8-12.

Scolnic, B. E. (1992). Bible-battering. Conservative Judaism, 45, 43-52.

Shluker, Z. (1988, February). A silent plague. Hadassah Magazine, 30-31.

Shupe, A., Stacey, W. A., & Hazlewood, L. R. (1987). Violent men, violent couples. Lexington, MA: Lexington.

Smith, M. D. (1990). Sociodemographic risk factors in wife abuse: Results from a survey of Toronto women. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 15, 39-58.

Soloff, E. D. (1995, Oct. 27). Jewish problem, too: Focus on domestic abuse. Chicago Jewish News, pp. 5, 26.

Solomon, M. F. (1992). The wounded couple. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 16, 31-43.

Solomonow, A. (Ed.) (1981). Roots of Jewish nonviolence. Nyack, NY: Jewish Peace Fellowship.

Sosland, A. (1995, Summer). Conference: Jewish battered women. Lilith, 20(2), 4-5.

Spiegel, M. C. (1988, Summer). The last taboo - Dare we speak about incest? Lilith, 20, 10-12.

Spitzer, J. R. (1991). When love is not enough: Spousal abuse in rabbinic and contemporary Judaism. New York: National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods.

Stoddard, G. A. (1982). Pastoral care for the abusive marriage. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Andover Newton Theological School, Newton, MA.

Stolz, B. A. (1979). Violence in the family: A national concern, a church concern. Washington, D.C.: United States Catholic Conference.

Straus, M. A., Gelles, R. J., & Steinmetz, S. K. (1980). Behind closed doors: Violence in the American family. Garden City, NY: Anchor/Doubleday.

Swirski, B. (1991). Jews don't batter their wives: Another myth bites the dust. In Swirski & Safir (Eds.), Calling the equality bluff (pp. 319-327). New York: Pergamon.

Tessler, J. (1991). The rabbi as counselor. In B. Herring (Ed.), The rabbinate as calling and vocation: Models of rabbinic leadership (pp. 77-87). Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson.

Thistlethwaite, S. B. (1981, November 16). Battered women and the Bible: From subjection to liberation. Christianity and Crisis, 41, 308-313.

Trainin, B. (1985). Jewish community urged to deal with wife abuse. Lilith, 12/13, 8, 44.

Trible, P. (1984). Texts of terror. Philadelphia: Fortress Press.

United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (1994, April). Judaism and child welfare (A United Synagogue Background Paper). New York: United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, Commission on Social Action and Public Policy.

United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (1995, February). Judaism and domestic violence (United Synagogue Resolution Implementation Packet). New York: United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, Commission on Social Action and Public Policy.

Weems, R. J. (1989). Gomer: Victim of violence or victim of metaphor? Semeia, 47, 87-104.

Wieselberg, H. (1992). Family therapy and Ultra-Orthodox Jewish families: A structural approach. Journal of Family Therapy, 14, 305-329.

Wikler, M. (1982). Another look at the diagnosis and treatment of Orthodox Jewish family problems. Journal of Psychology and Judaism, 7, 42-54.

Wikler, M. (1989). The religion of the therapist: Its meaning to Orthodox Jewish clients. Hillside Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 11, 131-146.

Wilson-Kastner, P. (1991). Theological perspectives on sexual violence. In M. D. Pellauer, B. Chester, & J. A. Boyajian (Eds.), Sexual assault and abuse: A handbook for clergy and religious professionals (pp. 96-108). San Francisco: HarperSanFranscisco.

Winters, M. S. (1988). Laws against sexual and domestic violence: A concise guide for clergy and laity. New York: Pilgrim Press.

Wood, A. D. (1992). Woman battering: The response of the clergy. Unpublished master's thesis, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana, PA.

Wood, A. D., & McHugh, M. C. (1994). Woman Battering: The response of the clergy. Pastoral Psychology, 42, 185-196.

Yaffe, J. (1972). So sue me! The story of a community court. New York: Saturday Review Press.

Yllo, K. A., & Straus, M. A. (1990). Patriarchy and violence against wives: The impact of structural and normative factors. In M. A. Straus & R. J. Gelles (Eds.), Physical violence in American families: Risk factors and adaptations to violence in 8,145 families (pp. 383-399). New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.

Zuk, G. H. (1978). A therapist's perspective on Jewish family values. Journal of Marriage and Family Counseling, 4, 103-110.

Source: http://users.aol.com/Agunah/bib-jdv.htm

© 1999-2002 Assyrians 4 Christ.  All rights reserved.  Click here for feedback and comments.