<p>Interweaving memoir with Hebrew poetry <em>Going Out with Knots</em> illuminates author Wendy I. Zierler's literary and personal Jewish mourning journey in the aftermath of unremitting personal loss.</p><p>She begins with her story: the death of both her parents in one year; the challenges she faced as a woman saying Kaddish in an Orthodox synagogue; and her decision to teach a weekly class on modern Hebrew poems that address grief prayer and God wrestling. Each subsequent chapter delves into the works of a different modern Hebrew poet--Lea Goldberg Avraham Ḥalfi Yehuda Amichai Rachel Morpurgo Rachel Bluwstein Ruhama Weiss and Amir Gilboa--in the order in which she translated interpreted and taught their poems (many translated into English for the first time). Each poet like Zierler comes to writing deeply connected to Jewish tradition and yet at odds with it too.</p><p>Ultimately <em>Going Out with Knots</em> reflects on how a woman living in a Modern Orthodox community can claim a place in the male-centered rituals that Jewish tradition prescribes for mourning and how immersion in modern Hebrew poetry can respond deeply to both communal (COVID-19 October 7) as well as personal losses offering a new form of theology and Torah. </p><p></p><p><strong>Wendy I. Zierler</strong> is Sigmund Falk Professor of Modern Jewish Literature and Feminist Studies at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York and the coeditor of <em>Prooftexts: A Journal of Jewish Literary History</em>. She is the author of <em>Movies and Midrash: Popular Film and Jewish Religious Conversation</em> and <em>And Rachel Stole the Idols: The Emergence of Hebrew Women's Writing</em> and coeditor of <em>These Truths We Hold: Judaism in an Age of Truthiness</em>.</p><p></p>
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