Bestiarium Judaicum Bestiarium Judaicum

Bestiarium Judaicum

Unnatural Histories of the Jews

    • $ 279.900,00
    • $ 279.900,00

Descripción editorial

Given the vast inventory of verbal and visual images of nonhuman animals—pigs, dogs, vermin, rodents, apes disseminated for millennia to debase, dehumanize, and justify the persecution of Jews, Bestiarium Judaicum asks: What is at play when Jewish-identified writers tell animal stories?

Focusing on the nonhuman-animal constructions of primarily Germanophone authors, including Sigmund Freud, Heinrich Heine, Franz Kafka, and Gertrud Kolmar, Jay Geller expands his earlier examinations (On Freud’s Jewish Body: Mitigating Circumcisions and The Other Jewish Question: Identifying the Jew and Making Sense of Modernity) of how such writers drew upon representations of Jewish corporeality in order to work through their particular situations in Gentile modernity. From Heine’s ironic lizards to Kafka’s Red Peter and Siodmak’s Wolf Man, Bestiarium Judaicum brings together Jewish cultural studies and critical animal studies to ferret out these writers’ engagement with the bestial answers upon which the Jewish and animal questions converged and by which varieties of the species "Jew" were identified.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2017
14 de noviembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
408
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Fordham University Press
VENDEDOR
Perseus Books, LLC
TAMAÑO
17.4
MB