This book delves into the lived experiences of queer and trans Jewish people living in so-called Australia. The volume weaves interviews, personal stories, and political analysis together to form a work which explores how queerness, transness, and Jewishness interplay in the context of living in the modern-day colony. Through discussions of Zionism, queer liberation, and community-making, the book provides insight into the historical and contemporary relationships queer and trans Jews have to ourselves, each other, the nation-state, and the world. In typical Jewish fashion, Zipporah is less about answers than it is about questions: how do we live a Jewish life queerly or a queer life Jewishly? What role do queer and trans Jews play in the tapestry of personal, national, and international politics? And perhaps most importantly, what can queer and trans Jewish experiences in Australia tell us about how we move forward in solidarity with our own communities and those who share in our struggles?
This book is an exploration of the lived experiences of queer and trans Jewish people living in so-called Australia. Equal parts interviews, personal stories, and political analysis, the book explores how queer and trans Jewish people navigate their gender, sexuality, faith, and culture in the modern Australian landscape.
Acknowledgements Introduction Swirling Towards Freedom:
Hermeneutics, Decolonizing Methodologies, and Queer Jewish Approaches to
Qualitative Research Hereness and Community Families, Inner Worlds, and
Queerness Reinventing Tradition: Holy Days, Artefacts, and Noshing
Elsewhereness, Landlessness, and Queer Jewish Solidarity Belonging: Threads
and Dead Ends An Un-Conclusion Afterword: Zipporah, Queen of the Desert
Index.
Dr. Shoshana Rosenberg is a butch lesbian researcher currently based in Naarm/ Melbourne. Her research focuses on the interplay between gender, sexuality, faith, and culture. Shoshana has published widely on queer and transgender health, and is the co-author of two books, Trans Reproductive and Sexual Health (2022) and Queer Entanglements (2021)