Affiliated Identities in Jewish American Literature
Autor Dr. David Hadaren Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 feb 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501371301
ISBN-10: 1501371304
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 4 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501371304
Pagini: 216
Ilustrații: 4 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Includes discussion of contemporary writers who have not yet received nearly as much critical attention as more canonical authors such as Philip Roth and Cynthia Ozick
Notă biografică
David Hadar is Associate Lecturer of English Language and Literature at Beit Berl College, Israel.
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Filiation and Affiliation2. Locating Affiliations3. Jewish American Literary Networks beyond English4. The Jewish Writer as an Old Man5. New Networks with Israeli Writers6. Negotiating Continuity: Writing about Philip Roth in Israel7. Kashua's Complaint: A Palestinian Writer Meets RothCodaNotesAppendix: An Abridged Map of Author ConnectionsIndex
Recenzii
Hadar's argument that Jewish American writers perform the inextricability of filiation and affiliation is a really great one. His effort to push us to imagine how filiation and affiliation actively figure each other, and that it is through active practices of affiliation that Jewish American literature--and in particular its Jewishness--is instantiated, promises to move the field far ahead of the historicist platitudes that have for too long held sway.
Guided by an appreciation for his own literary affiliations, David Hadar redefines Jewish literariness with a focus on authorial bonds and influences. Grounded in sociology, post-structuralism, philosophy, and literary analysis, this work not only challenges our assumptions about Jewish literature and Jewish authorial identity, but also about the nature of affiliations and the role of networking so crucial in determining the value of a work. Featuring engaging and nuanced readings of such authors as Emma Lazarus, Philip Roth, Nathan Englander, Nicole Krauss, and Sayed Kashua, Affiliated Identities underscores the need for transnational and translingual approaches to the study of literature in the 21st century and beyond.
In the spirit of current reevaluations of Jewish literature that go beyond identity as its touchstone, David Hadar demonstrates how writers influence their reception by fashioning literary networks. Affiliated Identities in Jewish American Literature sheds light on how authors themselves generate maps of Jewish writing not only through paratexts, but also through artistic strategies of affiliation. Hadar tells a fascinating story about how Jewish American authors bond with each other and with authors across national, linguistic, ethnic, and religious boundaries in order to create nodes of Jewish writing that call for reimagining Jewish literature. By extending recent discussions on the sociology of literature to Jewish American fiction, Affiliated Identities enriches the field with fresh and original readings of works by Philip Roth and Nicole Krauss among other contemporary writers, as well as calling our attention to newly formed networks between American and Israeli authors.
Affiliated Identities [is a] great example of not only the diversity of Jewish American literature today, but also its scholarship.
Guided by an appreciation for his own literary affiliations, David Hadar redefines Jewish literariness with a focus on authorial bonds and influences. Grounded in sociology, post-structuralism, philosophy, and literary analysis, this work not only challenges our assumptions about Jewish literature and Jewish authorial identity, but also about the nature of affiliations and the role of networking so crucial in determining the value of a work. Featuring engaging and nuanced readings of such authors as Emma Lazarus, Philip Roth, Nathan Englander, Nicole Krauss, and Sayed Kashua, Affiliated Identities underscores the need for transnational and translingual approaches to the study of literature in the 21st century and beyond.
In the spirit of current reevaluations of Jewish literature that go beyond identity as its touchstone, David Hadar demonstrates how writers influence their reception by fashioning literary networks. Affiliated Identities in Jewish American Literature sheds light on how authors themselves generate maps of Jewish writing not only through paratexts, but also through artistic strategies of affiliation. Hadar tells a fascinating story about how Jewish American authors bond with each other and with authors across national, linguistic, ethnic, and religious boundaries in order to create nodes of Jewish writing that call for reimagining Jewish literature. By extending recent discussions on the sociology of literature to Jewish American fiction, Affiliated Identities enriches the field with fresh and original readings of works by Philip Roth and Nicole Krauss among other contemporary writers, as well as calling our attention to newly formed networks between American and Israeli authors.
Affiliated Identities [is a] great example of not only the diversity of Jewish American literature today, but also its scholarship.