Old Order Amish and Jewish Ultra-Orthodox Women’s Responses to the Media

Orthodox Jewish Women standing on farm
January 8, 2024
4:00PM - 6:00PM
Hagery Hall Room 186

Date Range
2024-01-08 16:00:00 2024-01-08 18:00:00 Old Order Amish and Jewish Ultra-Orthodox Women’s Responses to the Media How do devoutly religious women cope with the media and its apparent incompatibility with their values and practices? This lecture researches Old Order Amish and Lithuanian and Hassidic Jewish ultra-Orthodox communities, between 2012 and 2015. Both communities are generally familiar with the media but limit their use of it. The two groups manifested different patterns of media use or nonuse, but had similar framings of danger and threat from the media. Rigorous adherence to religious dictates is greatly admired in these communities, and the women in both take considerable pride in manipulating their status in them. Their agency is reflected in how they negotiate the tension inherent in their contradictory roles as both gatekeepers and agents-of-change, which are analyzed in the lecture as valuable currencies in the cultural and religious markets these women negotiate.Learn more about this event on the NESA website. Hagery Hall Room 186 America/New_York public

How do devoutly religious women cope with the media and its apparent incompatibility with their values and practices? This lecture researches Old Order Amish and Lithuanian and Hassidic Jewish ultra-Orthodox communities, between 2012 and 2015. Both communities are generally familiar with the media but limit their use of it. The two groups manifested different patterns of media use or nonuse, but had similar framings of danger and threat from the media. Rigorous adherence to religious dictates is greatly admired in these communities, and the women in both take considerable pride in manipulating their status in them. Their agency is reflected in how they negotiate the tension inherent in their contradictory roles as both gatekeepers and agents-of-change, which are analyzed in the lecture as valuable currencies in the cultural and religious markets these women negotiate.

Learn more about this event on the NESA website.