The author of this tkhine intended for women to begin their morning devotional reading of prayers by first accepting patriarchal dominion. Women compensate for their inherent weakness and gain their honor only through the established gender roles assigned to them. The placement of this tkhine at the beginning of the Shas Tkhine Rav Peninim, a popular collection of women’s tkhines published in 1916 (during the ascent of women’s suffrage in the U.S.), suggests that it was written as a prescriptive polemic to influence pious Jewish women to reject advancing feminist ideas. . . .
Tags: 20th century C.E., 57th century A.M., anti-feminist, bitul neshama, dominion, gender roles, Jewish Women's Prayers, Problematic prayers, תחינות teḥinot, תחינות tkhines, Yiddish vernacular prayer
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