TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction
 

Institutional Sketch  

Scope and Content Note  

Organization  

Arrangement  

Restrictions  

Administrative Information 

Box and Folder Listing  

Series A: General Files. 1978-2000.

 
 

A Finding Aid to the 

Biblio Press Collection 

1978-2000

Manuscript Collection No. 669






Introduction 


Name: The Biblio Press Collection.

Dates:  1978-2000.

Abstract:  The Biblio Press Collection (1978-2000) contains the history of Biblio Press, a small Jewish women's studies publisher. This collection holds correspondence to and from Biblio Press's creator Doris Gold, book reviews, book listings and publicity, articles about Biblio Press and Gold, and book covers designed by Gold and others. 

Quantity:  0.4 linear feet, 1 Hollinger box.

Identification:  Manuscript Collection No. 669.

Institutional Sketch 

Since 1979, Biblio Press has been publishing non-fiction books for Jewish women with special emphasis on the women's movement in Judaism. As a small, feminist press, it has published a few books yearly, often with input and guidance from the academic community. Originally intended to provide reference guides and bibliographies, Biblio Press expanded to publish books of feminist content and various titles of interest to students in women's studies and religious programs.

Doris Gold was motivated by her long participation in Jewish organizational life to found Biblio Press, dedicated to educating Jewish women about their own history and accomplishments. Gold founded Biblio Press in 1979 particularly to inform Jewish professionals, such as social workers, and Jewish volunteers who served Jewish institutions about the backgrounds, experiences, and needs of Jewish women. Gold discovered, however, that it was laywomen, and not necessarily the professionals that were buying her books.

The first book published by Biblio Press was Aviva Cantor's The Jewish Woman: 1900-1978 Bibliography. It was an annotated bibliography and guide to hundreds of articles about Jewish women which Cantor updated periodically. More similar titles followed, such as Jewish Women and Jewish Law Bibliography, compiled by Ora Hamelsdorf and Sandra Adelsberg and The Jewish Women's Studies Guide , edited by Edward R. Levinson and Ellen Sue Levi Elwell. Most of the list were non-fiction, but there were some volumes of poetry, including Gold's own Honey in the Lion. By the end of the 1980's Biblio Press had produced several books that are "classics" of Jewish feminism like Miriam's Well: Rituals for Jewish Women Around the Year by Penina Adelman, which captured the energy of the emerging Rosh Chodesh movement and provided valuable information to those wanting to form their own groups. Other books regarding Israel and Jewish women leaders, such as Before Golda: Manya Shocat, by Rachel Yanait Ben-Zvi and Written out of History, by Sondra Henry and Emily Taitz, were published to rectify the historical narrative by placing women within the context of their time and place.

The importance of Biblio Press is in its ability to publish books that the larger publishing houses would not because of the belief that books about Jewish women were too narrow of a market or too controversial. Because Biblio Press was so small, Gold was able to publish the books that she felt were important or in demand. Since its beginnings Biblio Press saw the urgent need for this information and scholarship. This need is most apparent in the increase in sales of books in this genre and in the popularity of college programs and courses offered in Jewish women's studies by the 1990s. 

Biblio Press continues to be an important small publisher of Jewish women's studies.

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Scope and Content Note 

The Biblio Press Collection (1978-2000) contains the history of Biblio Press, a small Jewish women's studies publisher. This collection holds correspondence to and from Biblio Press's creator Doris Gold, book reviews, book listings and publicity, articles about Biblio Press and Gold, and book covers designed by Gold and others. This collection also contains excerpts from a book about Trude Adler Forsher, Elvis Presley's secretary. 

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Organization 


This collection consists of one series.

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Arrangement 

See individual series description.

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Restrictions 

Access Information 

The  Biblio Press Collection are open to all users and available in the reading room of the American Jewish Archives.

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Administrative Information 

Citations 

Footnotes and bibliographic references should refer to the Biblio Press Collection and the American Jewish Archives. 

Provenance 

The Biblio Press Collection was donated in 2001 by Doris Gold, New York, New York.

Processing Information 

Processed by Christine A. Crandall, October 2001.

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Box and Folder Listing 

      The Biblio Press records consist of articles, awards, book covers , correpondence and                    book reviews. The files are arranged alphabetically by topic.















Box Folder
1 1
Awards. 1963-1987

2
Biblio Press. Articles. 1980-1998

3
Book covers. 

4
Book lists. 1978-1999

5
Book reviews. 1980-1995

6
Correspondence. 1978-1999, n.d.

7
Correspondence regarding Bright Eminence 1993

8
Forsher, Trude Adler, Elvis Presley's secretary. 1990

9
Genesis Magazine. Articles. 1981, 1988-1989

10
Gold, Doris. Biography. 2001.

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©2001. All rights reserved.
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives.