Jump to content

Smadar Lavie

Page semi-protected
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Smadar Lavie

Smadar Lavie is a professor emerita of anthropology at the University of California Davis, and a Mizrahi anthropologist, author, and activist. She specializes in the anthropology of Egypt, Israel and Palestine, emphasizing issues of race, gender and religion. She received her doctorate in anthropology from the University of California at Berkeley (1989).

Academic life

Lavie received her BA in social anthropology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1980 (majors: sociology and social anthropology; minors: medieval Islamic civilization, musicology).[1] Lavie received her Ph.D. in cultural anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1989 and was awarded the Malcolm H. Kerr Dissertation Award from the Middle East Studies Association for her dissertation titled, "The Poetics of Military Occupation: Mzeina Allegories of Bedouin Identity under Israeli and Egyptian Rule"[2] which was later published by the University of California Press,[3][4] and received the 1990 honorable mention of the Victor Turner Award for Ethnographic Writing.[5]

In 1990, Lavie became an assistant professor of anthropology and critical theory at the University of California, Davis, where she was promoted to an associate professorship in 1994.[6][7][8] Lavie held visiting professorships at Diablo Valley College (1984), University of California, Berkeley's Fall Freshman Program (1985–1989), Stanford University (1994), Beit Berl College (2001–2007),[9][10] Macalester College (2007-2009)[11][12] University of Virginia (2009–2010)[13] and the University of Minnesota (2010–2012).[14] Professor Lavie was the recipient of residential fellowships at the Rockefeller Foundation in Bellagio (1993),[15] Stanford Humanities Center (1993-1994)[16][17] Institute for Advanced Study, University of Minnesota (2010–2011),[18] Cento Incontri Umani Ascona (2011),[19] the University College Cork (2010–2016),[20] the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, University of California, Berkeley (2013-2014),[21] the Beatrice Bain Research Group, University of California, Berkeley (2012-2016),[22][23] the Simon and Riva Spatz Visiting Chair in Jewish Studies, Dalhousie University (2018/2019),[24] the Department of Ethnic Studies, University of California, Berkeley (2016-2020),[25] and the Institute of Asian and Transcultural Studies, Vilnius University (2017, 2018, 2022).[26]

Recognition

Lavie authored The Poetics of Military Occupation (UC Press, 1990), receiving the 1990 honorable mention of the Victor Turner Award for Ethnographic Writing,[5] and Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture (Berghahn Books 2014,[27] University of Nebraska Press 2018[28]) receiving the 2015 honorable mention of the Association of Middle East Women's Studies Book Award Competition.[29] Wrapped in the Flag of Israel's first edition was also one of the four finalists in the 2015 Clifford Geertz Book Award Competition of the Society for the Anthropology of Religion.[29] Lavie won the American Studies Association's 2009 Gloria Anzaldúa Prize for her article, "Staying Put: Crossing the Palestine-Israel Border with Gloria Anzaldúa",[30] published in Anthropology and Humanism (2011).[31] In 2013, she won the "Heart at East" Honor Plaque for lifetime service to Mizraḥi communities in Israel-Palestine.[32][33][34][35] Her 2019 article "Gaza 2014 and Mizrahi Feminism" was awarded certificates as a top downloaded paper for 2018 to 2022,[36] 2020, and 2021 to 2022 by Wiley Publishing. In 2022, she was elected a senior Fulbright scholar at the Institute of Asian and Transcultural Studies at Vilnius University in Lithuania.[37][38]

Activism

Lavie is a member of many political, feminist and anti-racist organizations. In 2013, she won the "Heart at East" Honor Plaque for committed excellence and lifetime service to the Mizrahi communities of Israel, given by a coalition of twenty NGOs working for equal distribution of cultural funds in Israel.[32][33][34][35]

Lavie was co-founder and a member of CAFIOT (the Berkeley Committee for Academic Freedom in the Israeli Occupied Territories) from 1982 to 1989.[39]

Lavie is co-signatory to the 1993 Bellagio Declaration for the protection collective indigenous and exilic cultural heritage as intellectual property.[15]

Lavie has served a number of roles at Ahoti (Sister) for Women in Israel, Israel's feminist of color movement.[40] From January 2003 to January 2005, she served on the board of directors. From 2002 to 2003, she both served as the liaison to the New Israel Fund and was a member of the newsletter's editorial collective. From 2003-2004, she was the liaison to the FFIPP (Educational Network for Human Rights in Palestine/Israel).[39][35]

Lavie co-founded the Coalition of Women for Mothers and Children and served as co-director of this coalition of many NGOs from 2003 to 2006.[39]

Lavie has been a member of the Mizrahi Democratic Rainbow Coalition (MDR) since 2002. She served on the Culture Committee from 2002 to 2004, the Committee on Education and the Core Curriculum from 2002 to 2003, and was the MDR Representative to the Coalition of NGOs against Racism from 2005 to 2007.[39]

Lavie has been an Advisory Board Member of Israel's Women's Parliament since 2002.[39][41]

Lavie co-founded the Mizrahi-Palestinian Coalition Against Apartheid in Israeli Anthropology (CAAIA) and was a member from 2002 to 2008.[39][42][43][44][45][46][47]

Lavie is a member of Jewish Voice for Peace.[2]

Select publications

Books

  • The Poetics of Military Occupation: Mzeina Allegories of Bedouin Identity Under Israeli and Egyptian Rule. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1991. Honorable mention for the Victor Turner Award for Ethnographic Writing.[48] ISBN 0-520-07552-8
  • Creativity/Anthropology. With Kirin Narayan and Renato Rosaldo. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993. ISBN 978-0-8014-9542-7
  • Displacement, Diaspora, and Geographies of Identity. With Ted Swedenburg. Durham: Duke University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-8223-1720-6
  • Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture. New York: Berghahn Books, 2014. ISBN 978-1-78238-222-5 In 2018, the University of Nebraska Press published a revised paperback edition with an expanded afterword discussing the relationship between Mizrahi feminism and Israel-Gaza wars as part of its Expanding Frontiers: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Studies of Women, Gender and Sexuality series. ISBN 978-1-4962-0554-4 Wrapped in the Flag of Israel received the 2015 Honorable Mention of the Association of Middle East Women's Studies Book Award competition.[49] It was also a finalist for the 2015 Clifford Geertz Book Award competition by the Society for the Anthropology of Religion.[50]

Selected articles

  • 1984 "Bedouin in Limbo: Egyptian and Israeli Development Policies in the Southern Sinai". Antipode 16(2): 33-44 (co-authored with William C. Young)[51]
  • 1989 "When Leadership Becomes Allegory: Mzeina Sheikhs and the Experience of Occupation". Cultural Anthropology 4(2): 99-135.[52]
  • 1992 "Blow-Ups in the Borderzones: Third World Israeli Authors' Gropings for Home". New Formations 18: 84-106.[53]
  • 1993 "Notes on the Fantastic Journey of the Hajj, His Anthropologist, and Her American Passport". American Ethnologist (co-authored with Hajj A. and Forest Rouse) 20(2): 363-384.[54]
  • 1995 "Border Poets: Translating by Dialogue". In Women Writing Culture. R. Behar and D. Gordon, eds. pp. 412–427. Berkeley: University of California Press.[55]
  • 1996 "Between and Among the Boundaries of Culture: Bridging Text and Lived Experience in the Third Timespace". Cultural Studies 10(1):154-179.[56]
  • 2007 "Imperialism and Colonialism: Zionism". Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures, Vol. 6. Leiden: Brill, pp. 9–15[57]
  • 2011 "Mizrahi Feminism and the Question of Palestine". Journal of Middle East Women Studies 7(2): 56-88.[58]
  • 2011 "Staying Put: Crossing the Israel–Palestine Border with Gloria Anzaldúa". Anthropology and Humanism Quarterly 36(1): 101-121.[59] Winner of the Gloria Anzaldúa Award, the Women's Committee of the American Studies Association.[30]
  • 2012 "The Knafo Chronicles: Marching on Jerusalem with Israel's Silent Majority". Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work 27(3): 300-315.[60]
  • 2012 "Writing Against Identity Politics: An Essay on Gender, Race, and Bureaucratic Pain". American Ethnologist 39(4): 780-804.[61]
  • 2019 "Gaza 2014 and Mizrahi Feminism". Political and Legal Anthropology Review 42(3): 85-109.[62]
  • 2021 "Confession and Mirage: Professor Mas'uda and the Ashkenazim-for-Palestine in Israel's Academe". Journal of Academic Freedom Vol. 12[13]
  • 2022 "Who Can Publish Autohistoria-Teoria with the Anger It Deserves?: Unclassified Lloronas and the Academic Text". In El Mundo Zurdo 8: Selected Works from the 2019 Meeting of the Society for the Study of Gloria Anzaldua.  Adrianna M. Santos, Rita E Urquijo-Ruiz and Norma E Cantu, eds., 151-168. San Francisco: Aunt Lute Books[14]
  • 2024 "Presence and Absence in Enemies, A Love Story: An Essay on Familism, Traditionalism, and Ultranationalism". Palestine/Israel Review 1(2).[63]

Selected public anthropology articles

  • 1991 "Arrival of the New Cultured Tenants: Soviet Immigration to Israel and the Displacing of the Sephardi Jews". The Times Literary Supplement 4602:11, 14 June.[64]
  • 2003 "Lilly White Feminism and Academic Apartheid in Israel". Anthropology Newsletter, October Issue, pp. 10–11.[65]
  • 2005 "Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology". Anthropology Newsletter January Issue. P. 8.[66]
  • 2005 "Rachel Gamliel of the Ma'abari Family, My Granny". Beirut Independent Media Center.[67]
  • 2006 "Operations 'Summer Rains' and 'Adequate Pay' — Yet Other Acts in the Mizrahi-Palestinian Tragedy". Co-authored with Reuven Abarjel, co-founder of Israel's Black Panthers. Counter Currents.[68]
  • 2006 "On the Progress of Affirmative Action and Cultural Rights for Marginalized Communities in Israel". Co-authored with Rafi Shubeli. Anthropology Newsletter. November. pp. 6–7.[69]
  • 2007 "Dry Twigs". The Electronic Intifada. 3 August.[70]
  • 2009 "Sacrificing Gaza to Revive Israel's Labor Party". Counter Currents.19 January.[71]
  • 2015 "Smadar Lavie, Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture, 1st Edition (New Texts Out Now)". Jadaliyya. 18 February.[72]
  • 2015 "Revisiting Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology: Our "Special Relations". Allegra Lab Anthropology Blog. 27 October.[46]
  • 2020 "Smadar Lavie, Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture, Revised Edition with a New Afterword by the Author (New Texts Out Now)". Jadaliyya. 16 January.[73]

Selected video lectures

  • 2004 "Cultural Property Rights and the Racial Construction of the Mizrahi as a Trade-Mark: Notes on the Revolving Door of Israel's Academe-Regime". Presented in a conference, "The New IP Order", in a 4-participant panel on "Culture and Copyright". Haifa University. 14 June.[74]
  • 2015 "Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture". Brown University, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. 20 October.[75]
  • 2018 "Ahoti (=Sistah): Portraits of Mizrahi Feminists #1". Noemie Serfaty short video, San Francisco. 17 December.[76]
  • 2020 "The Zionist Movement and Mizrahi Women: Right Wing Feminism of Color in the State of Israel". Pandemic Webinar with Jewish Voice for Peace Bay Area. 26 July[77]

References

  1. ^ "Smadar Lavie — People in the Social Science Departments at UC Davis". anthropology.ucdavis.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  2. ^ a b "Malcolm H. Kerr Dissertation Awards". Middle East Studies Association. Archived from the original on January 25, 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  3. ^ The Poetics of Military Occupation, UC Press. University of California Press. October 1990. ISBN 9780520075528. Retrieved 11 Feb 2020.
  4. ^ "Middle East Studies Association - Malcolm H. Kerr Dissertation Awards - Smadar Lavie". Middle East Studies Association. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  5. ^ a b "Past Victor Turner Prize Winners | Society for Humanistic Anthropology". sha.americananthro.org. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  6. ^ Lavie, Smadar (1995). Women Writing Culture. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520202085. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Displacement, Diaspora, and Geographies of Identity". Duke University Press. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
  8. ^ Grossberg, Lawrence; Radway, Janice (2005-06-27). Cultural Studies: 10:1 Controversies in Cultural Studies. Routledge. ISBN 9781134759408. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
  9. ^ "Beit Berl". Archived from the original on September 25, 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  10. ^ טיימס, ניו יורק; כתבת "" (2007-03-18). "כנס לזכר ויקי שירן במכללת בית ברל". הארץ (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  11. ^ World, American Jewish (2014-04-09). "Israel's single mothers from the East". American Jewish World. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  12. ^ "WGSS Faculty and their Inter-Disciplines" (PDF). Intersections. Fall 2008. Retrieved June 16, 2024.
  13. ^ a b "Visiting Professor Illuminates Plight of Mizrahi Women in Israel in Light of the Palestine-Israel Conflict". Archived from the original on 2014-04-07.
  14. ^ a b Lavie, Smadar (2012). "The Knafo Chronicles: Marching on Jerusalem With Israel's Silent Majority". Affilia. 27 (3). doi:10.1177/0886109912443958. S2CID 146866104.
  15. ^ a b "The Bellagio Declaration (must use continue to selected page link)". Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  16. ^ "Fellows: 1993-1994". Stanford Humanities Center. Archived from the original on May 1, 2022. Retrieved 11 Feb 2020.
  17. ^ "Smadar Lavie | Stanford Humanities Center". shc.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  18. ^ "Tuesdays with a Scholar". University of Minnesota. 14 January 2011. Retrieved 11 Feb 2020.
  19. ^ "Centro Incontri Umani Ascona".
  20. ^ "ISS21 Visiting Scholars". University College Cork. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  21. ^ "CMES Newsletter" (PDF). CMES Newsletter. Fall 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  22. ^ "BBRG Visiting Scholars". Archived from the original on 2012-11-15.
  23. ^ "Visiting Scholars Program". ethnicstudies.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
  24. ^ "Introducing the 2018‑19 Spatz Visiting Chair in Jewish Studies". Dalhousie News. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  25. ^ "Wrapped in the Flag of Israel | Reading Religion (please see author bio)". readingreligion.org. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  26. ^ "Smadar Lavie". Vilnius University. Retrieved June 17, 2024.
  27. ^ Lavie, Smadar (April 2014). Wrapped in the Flag of Israel. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-78238-222-5. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  28. ^ "Wrapped in the Flag of Israel - University of Nebraska Press". Nebraska Press. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  29. ^ a b "2015 AMEWS Book Honorable Mentions". Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, John Hope Franklin Center, Duke University. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  30. ^ a b "The Gloria E. Anzaldua Award for Independent Scholars, Contingent or Community College Faculty 2013". American Studies Association. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
  31. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2011). "Staying Put: Crossing the Israel–Palestine Border with Gloria Anzaldúa". Anthropology and Humanism. 36 (1): 101. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1409.2011.01083.x.
  32. ^ a b Lavie, Smadar. "Heart At East Letter to Smadar Lavie".
  33. ^ a b "'Wrapped in the Flag of Israel' Author Earns Heart at East Award".
  34. ^ a b Lavie, Smadar. "Anthropology News" (PDF). Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  35. ^ a b c Lavie, Smadar. "The Heart at East Ceremony: Powerpoint Biographic Presentation". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  36. ^ "Smadar Lavie: South/South Feminist Coalitions and the Art of Staying Put: Crossing the Palestine/Israel Border with Gloria Anzaldua". Macalester College. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  37. ^ "Smadar Lavie | Fulbright Scholar Program". fulbrightscholars.org. Retrieved 2024-06-15.
  38. ^ "Smadar Lavie". www.fsf.vu.lt. Retrieved 2024-06-15.
  39. ^ a b c d e f Lavie, Smadar. "Curriculum Vitae". Academia.edu. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  40. ^ מעבר לפוליטיקת הזהויות: הערות על סולידריות (או היעדרה) במאבק המזרחי, retrieved 2020-02-12
  41. ^ bigsister13. "מי אנחנו". פרלמנט נשים (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2020-02-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  42. ^ Daas, Ruba; Bar Shalom, Yehuda (2008). "Where Have All the Palestinians Gone?" (PDF). International Journal of Critical Pedagogy. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-08. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  43. ^ Lavie, Smadar (January 2005). "Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology". Anthropology News. 46: 8. doi:10.1525/an.2005.46.1.8. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  44. ^ Lavie, Smadar; Shubeli, Rafi (November 2006). "On the Progress of Affirmative Action and Cultural Rights for Marginalized Communities in Israel". Anthropology News. 47 (8): 6–7. doi:10.1525/an.2006.47.8.6. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  45. ^ "Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology: Our "Special Relations" / Prof. Smadar Lavie". הקשת הדמוקרטית המזרחית (in Hebrew). 2012-11-18. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  46. ^ a b "Revisiting Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology: Our 'Special Relations' #Palestine". Allegra. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  47. ^ "Complaint of the Israeli Universities, from the Coalition to End Apartheid in Israeli Anthropology". הקשת הדמוקרטית המזרחית (in Hebrew). 2012-11-18. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  48. ^ "Society for Humanistic Anthropology Prize Winners". Society for Humanistic Anthropology. Retrieved 2014-03-18.
  49. ^ "AMEWS Book Award | AMEWS". Retrieved 2024-07-01.
  50. ^ Hill, Jonathan D. "Letter from 2015 Geertz Prize Committee" (PDF). Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  51. ^ Lavie, Smadar; Young, William C. (1984). "Bedouin in Limbo: Egyptian and Israeli Development Policies in Southern Sinai". Antipode. 16 (2): 33–44. Bibcode:1984Antip..16...33L. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8330.1984.tb00661.x.
  52. ^ Lavie, Smadar (1989). "When Leadership Becomes Allegory: Mzeina Sheikhs and the Experience of Military Occupation". Cultural Anthropology. 4 (2): 99–136. doi:10.1525/can.1989.4.2.02a00010.
  53. ^ Lavie, Smadar (January 1992). "Blow-Ups in the Borderzones Third World Israeli Authors Gropings for Home". New Formations. 18: 84–106.
  54. ^ Lavie, Smadar; Hajj A.; Rouse, Forest. "Notes on the Fantastic Journey of the Hajj his Anthropologist and her American Passport". American Ethnologist. 20 (2): 363–384.
  55. ^ Lavie, Smadar. "Border Poets Translating by Dialogue". In Ruth Behar; Deborah A. Gordon (eds.). Women Writing Culture. pp. 412–427.
  56. ^ Lavie, Smadar; Swedenburg, Ted (1996). "Between and among the boundaries of culture: Bridging text and lived experience in the third timespace". Cultural Studies. 10: 154–179. doi:10.1080/09502389600490501.
  57. ^ Lavie, Smadar. "Colonialism and Imperialism Zionism". Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures. Vol. 6. pp. 9–15.
  58. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2011). "Mizrahi Feminism and the Question of Palestine". Journal of Middle East Women's Studies. 7 (2): 56–88. doi:10.2979/jmiddeastwomstud.7.2.56. S2CID 145667897.
  59. ^ "Staying Put Crossing the Israel-Palestine Border with Gloria Anzaldua".
  60. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2012). "The Knafo Chronicles". Affilia. 27 (3): 300–315. doi:10.1177/0886109912443958. S2CID 146866104.
  61. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2012). "Writing against identity politics: An essay on gender, race, and bureaucratic pain". American Ethnologist. 39 (4): 779–803. doi:10.1111/j.1548-1425.2012.01395.x.
  62. ^ Lavie, Smadar (January 2019). "Gaza 2014 and Mizraḥi Feminism". PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. 42: 85–109. doi:10.1111/plar.12284. S2CID 150473862.
  63. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2024-06-26). "Presence and Absence in Enemies, a Love Story: An Essay on Familism, Traditionalism and Ultranationalism". Palestine/Israel Review.
  64. ^ Lavie, Smadar (June 14, 1991). "Arrival of the New cultured Tenants: Soviet Immigration to Israel and the Displacing of the Sephardi Jews". Times Literary Supplement. 4602: 11.
  65. ^ Lavie, Smadar (October 2003). "Lily White Feminism and Academic Apartheid in Israel Anthropological Perspectives". Anthropology News: 10–11. doi:10.1111/an.2003.44.7.10.
  66. ^ Lavie, Smadar (2005). "Israeli Anthropology and American Anthropology". Anthropology News. 46 (1): 8. doi:10.1525/an.2005.46.1.8.
  67. ^ "Rachel Gamliel: A Palestinian-Jew from Jerusalem".
  68. ^ "Operations 'Summer Rains' and 'Adequate Pay' - Yet Other Acts in the Mizrahi-Palestinian Tragedy".
  69. ^ Lavie, Smadar; Shubeli, Rafi (2006). "On the Progress of Affirmative Action and Cultural Rights for Marginalized Communities". Anthropology News. 47 (8): 6–7. doi:10.1525/an.2006.47.8.6.
  70. ^ "Dry Twigs". 28 July 2007.
  71. ^ "Sacrificing Gaza - Revive Israel's Labor Party". 18 January 2009.
  72. ^ جدلية, Jadaliyya-. "New Texts Out Now: Smadar Lavie, Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture". Jadaliyya - جدلية. Retrieved 2020-02-13.
  73. ^ جدلية, Jadaliyya-. "Smadar Lavie, Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture, Revised Edition with a New Afterword by the Author (New Texts Out Now)". Jadaliyya - جدلية. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  74. ^ "Mizrahim as Commodity/Signs, Mizrahim as Authors: Cultural Property Rights and the Racial Formations of Israel's Academe-Regime". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  75. ^ "Smadar Lavie - Wrapped in the Flag of Israel: Mizrahi Single Mothers and Bureaucratic Torture". Youtube.com. 29 October 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  76. ^ "Ahoti (=Sistah): Portraits of Mizrahi Feminists". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  77. ^ The Zionist Movement and Mizrahi Women: Right Wing Feminism of Color in the State of Israel | Jewish Voice for Peace Bay Area is grateful to host Professor Smadar Lavie speaking on The Zionist Movement and Mizrahi Women: Right Wing Feminism of ... | By Jewish Voice for Peace Bay Area | Facebook. Retrieved 2024-06-15 – via www.facebook.com.