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Borrowed Voices: Writing and Racial Ventriloquism in the Jewish American Imagination

Autor Jennifer Glaser
en Paperback – 9 mar 2016 – vârsta ani
In the decades following World War II, many American Jews sought to downplay their difference, as a means of assimilating into Middle America. Yet a significant minority, including many prominent Jewish writers and intellectuals, clung to their ethnic difference, using it to register dissent with the status quo and act as spokespeople for non-white America. 
 
In this provocative book, Jennifer Glaser examines how racial ventriloquism became a hallmark of Jewish-American fiction, as Jewish writers asserted that their own ethnicity enabled them to speak for other minorities. Rather than simply condemning this racial ventriloquism as a form of cultural appropriation or commending it as an act of empathic imagination, Borrowed Voices offers a nuanced analysis of the technique, judiciously assessing both its limitations and its potential benefits.  Glaser considers how the practice of racial ventriloquism has changed over time, examining the books of many well-known writers, including Bernard Malamud, Cynthia Ozick, Philip Roth, Michael Chabon, Saul Bellow, and many others.  
 
Bringing Jewish studies into conversation with critical race theory, Glaser also opens up a dialogue between Jewish-American literature and other forms of media, including films, magazines, and graphic novels. Moreover, she demonstrates how Jewish-American fiction can help us understand the larger anxieties about ethnic identity, authenticity, and authorial voice that emerged in the wake of the civil rights movement.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780813577395
ISBN-10: 081357739X
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:None
Editura: Rutgers University Press
Colecția Rutgers University Press

Notă biografică

JENNIFER GLASER is an assistant professor of English and comparative literature and an affiliate faculty member in Judaic studies and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio.  

Cuprins

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Politics and Poetics of Speaking the Other
2. The Perils of Loving in America
3. What We Talk About When We Talk About the Holocaust
4. The Jew in the Canon and Culture Wars
5. Race, Indigeneity, and the Topography of Diaspora in Contemporary Jewish American Literature
Coda
Notes
Works Cited
Index
 

Recenzii

"Glaser offers a nuanced, impressively researched, and innovatively crafted setoff reading that requires us to rethink the messy-but-critical connection between race and Jewishness. It is an excellent book."

"Borrowed Voices helps us to understand how our rapid-fire transmission of affect and fascination with identity is a manifestation of deep anxieties over power and belonging in America."

Descriere

In this provocative new study, Jennifer Glaser examines how racial ventriloquism became a hallmark of late twentieth-century Jewish-American fiction, as Jewish writers asserted that their own ethnicity enabled them to speak for other minorities. Considering works by everyone from Cynthia Ozick to Woody Allen to Michael Chabon, she demonstrates how Jewish-American fiction can help us understand the larger anxieties about identity, authenticity, and authorial voice that emerged in the wake of the civil rights movement.