Non-Fiction

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Collection

Episode 141: The Quiet Radicalism of Judy Blume

For generations of readers, Judy Blume's novels made growing up feel less lonely. In this episode, Judith Rosenbaum talks with Mark Oppenheimer, author of a new biography of Blume, about their favorite Blume titles, what’s Jewish about her work, and why her novels are radical in ways people often overlook. Throughout the episode, listeners share what Judy Blume's books mean to them.

Paula Brown Doress-Worters

Working with Paula was always a joy. She was witty, hard-working, playful, and always so thoughtful. I continue to admire how she helped so many better understand the injustices we all face by drawing from her own and others’ lived experiences. 

Micaela Feldman/Mika Etchebehere

Micaela Feldman, known primarily as “Mika Etchebehere/Etchebéhère,” was a Spanish-language writer who also published in French, bearing witness to several major political events and intellectual debates of the twentieth century in Argentina and Europe. In particular, she played a prominent role in the Spanish Civil War as the captain of a revolutionary militia fighting against Francisco Franco’s and the Falange’s fascism. She rose to wider fame in 1976 with the publication of her autofiction Ma guerre d’Espagne à moi/Mi guerra de España.

Alicia Partnoy

Alicia Partnoy, a survivor of Argentina’s so-called “Dirty War” (1976-1983), is an Argentine author, activist, and scholar who lives in Los Angeles, California. Her best known work is The Little School: Tales of Disappearance and Survival, which was introduced as evidence in the trials against the perpetrators in charge of the secret detention camps in her hometown and in the South of the country. 

Episode 131: Together in Manzanar: A Japanese Jewish American Story

In the spring of 1942, at the height of World War II, Elaine Buchman Yoneda became the only Jewish woman on record to be imprisoned in an American concentration camp. Manzanar was one of the detention centers—commonly known as Japanese internment camps—where the US government imprisoned 120,000 people of Japanese descent, the majority of whom were American citizens, during the war. Elaine spent ten months in Manzanar, along with her Japanese-American husband, Karl, and their 3-year-old son, Tommy. In this episode of Can We Talk?, Tracy Slater, author of Together in Manzanar, describes the bleak living conditions in the camp, the tensions that festered among the prisoners, and how the Yonedas became targets of violence. She also talks about how the anti-immigrant and racist policies of the time tore families apart, and how those same forces are reemerging today.

Episode 130: Molly Goldberg, America's First TV Mom

From 1929 until the mid 1950s, Molly Goldberg was America’s favorite Jewish mother. Her character was written, acted, and embodied by Gertrude Berg, the first female showrunner and the first woman to win an Emmy for television. First on radio, then on television, The Goldbergs was a hit show and the first family sitcom. In this episode of Can We Talk?, New Yorker staff writer Emily Nussbaum introduces us to Gertrude Berg and her lovable character Molly Goldberg. We talk about how Molly remade the image of the Jewish mother, how McCarthy-era persecution led to the show’s downfall, and how the show still resonates today.

Selina Solomons

Selina Solomons was a turn-of-the-twentieth-century activist and writer, best known for her leadership role in the 1911 suffrage campaign that granted California women the right to vote. Solomons belonged to a prominent Jewish American family and spent her life in the San Francisco Bay Area. She employed multiple genres in advocacy of women’s rights, including speeches, poetry, drama, short fiction, and a manual-cum-suffrage history titled How We Won the Vote in California

Bonus Episode: Our Hot Summer Picks

In this special summer episode, Judith, Nahanni, and Jen each share something they've read, watched, or listened to this summer that Can We Talk? listeners will love.

Collage of books about Jewish motherhood

Reading Jewish Motherhood in Full Color

Zia Saylor

This Mother’s Day, explore Jewish motherhood in all its nuance with books that go far beyond the clichés.

Elaine Showalter

Elaine Showalter is a pioneer of feminist criticism. She is best known for inventing the term “gynocriticism,” a new theoretical framework that argued that that women had been using the language of men for far too long and that they needed to develop a new critical approach to better understand the female subcultures that operate within male-dominated power structures. 

Elana Sztokman Headshot 2025 and Book Cover

Elana Sztokman on Her New Book, "In My Jewish State"

Janice Weizman

JWA talks to Elana Sztokman about her new book, In My Jewish State, which explores her political and religious transformation and her work for a better future in Israel. 

Mae Rockland Tupa

Mae Rockland Tupa (b. 1937) is an accomplished multimedia artist and author whose prolific work has helped shape the field of Jewish Americana. Her work, including papercuts, prints, and textiles, explores themes of Jewish identity, history, and culture. She has published seven books, including the pioneering 1973 text The Work of Our Hands: Jewish Needlecraft for Today. Her work is housed in the collections of numerous institutions, such as The Jewish Museum in New York City.

Barbara Ostfeld

Barbara Ostfeld became the first ordained female cantor at age 22, serving a number of temples in her tenure. Ostfeld was passionate about music from a young age and finds joy in her work through poetry and musical theory alike. She is also a writer; her essays on feminism and cantorial work have been printed in several publications. 

Shoshana McKinney Cropped

7 Questions For Shoshana McKinney Kirya-Ziraba

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with Shoshana McKinney Kirya-Ziraba, writer and founder of Tikvah Chadasha Uganda.

Rabbi Dov Linzer and Abigail Pogrebin

Q & A: Rabbi Dov Linzer & Abigail Pogrebin on "It Takes Two to Torah"

Judith Rosenbaum

JWA chats with Orthodox rabbi Dov Linzer and Reform journalist Abigail Pogrebin about their new book, It Takes Two to Torah. 

Zibby Owens and Book Cover

"On Being Jewish Now" with Zibby Owens

Jodie Sadowsky

JWA talks to Zibby Owens about On Being Jewish Now, a new collection of essays she curated in the wake of October 7. 

Liz Kleinrock Cropped

7 Questions For Author Liz Kleinrock

Sarah Groustra

JWA talks to author and educator Liz Kleinrock about her new book, What Jewish Looks Like, and about making Jewish communities more inclusive. 

Melissa Klapper Headshot 2024

Writing Jewish Women Into America's Story

Sally Wiener Grotta

JWA chats with Melissa R. Klapper about her groundbreaking work on American Jewish women’s history, including her forthcoming book, The Civil War Diary of Emma Mordecai.

Collage of pencils

How Vulnerability Makes My Writing Stronger

Aria Lynn-Skov

The moment I write with any vulnerability, I second-guess every opinion. Overcoming my fear and writing about my vulnerability has made me a better writer. 

Topics: Non-Fiction
Judy Ruden Cropped

Where Are They Now? RVF Alum Judy Ruden

Sarah Biskowitz

JWA talks to Rising Voices Fellowship alum Judy Ruden, an incoming first-year student at University of Texas-Austin, for our series marking the tenth anniversary of the fellowship. 

Miriam Novitch

Miriam Novitch was a member of the French Resistance during World War II and, after, an advocate for education on the Jewish resistance and the experiences of Holocaust survivors. She was one of the founders of the Itzhak Katzenelson Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Heritage Museum (also known as the Ghetto Fighter’s House, or GFH) and served as the curator for its art collection for many years. 

Sofia Isaias-Day 2024 Cropped

Where Are They Now? RVF Alum Sofia Isaias-Day

Sarah Biskowitz

JWA talks to Rising Voices Fellowship alum Sofia Isaias-Day for our series marking the 10th anniversary of the fellowship.

Charlotte Charlaque

Finding Strength in My Transcestor

Ariadne Wolf

My great-aunt Charlotte has taught me so much. But until recently, I didn't even know she existed. 

Helen Kim Headshot

7 Questions For Helen Kim

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with sociology professor and author Helen Kim.

Rose Clubok cropped

Where Are They Now? RVF Alum Rose Clubok

Sarah Biskowitz

JWA talks to Rising Voices Fellowship alum Rose Clubok for our series marking the 10th anniversary of the fellowship.

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