Rewriting the Jew Rewriting the Jew
Contraversions: Jews and Other Differences

Rewriting the Jew

Assimilation Narratives in the Russian Empire

    • USD 69.99
    • USD 69.99

Descripción editorial

In the Russian Empire of the 1870s and 1880s, while intellectuals and politicians furiously debated the "Jewish Question," more and more acculturating Jews, who dressed, spoke, and behaved like non-Jews, appeared in real life and in literature. This book examines stories about Jewish assimilation by four authors: Grigory Bogrov, a Russian Jew; Eliza Orzeszkowa, a Polish Catholic; and Nikolai Leskov and Anton Chekhov, both Eastern Orthodox Russians. Safran introduces the English-language reader to works that were much discussed in their own time, and she situates Jewish and non-Jewish writers together in the context they shared.

For nineteenth-century writers and readers, successful fictional characters were "types," literary creations that both mirrored and influenced the trajectories of real lives. Stories about Jewish assimilators and converts often juxtaposed two contrasting types: the sincere reformer or true convert who has experienced a complete transformation, and the secret recidivist or false convert whose real loyalties will never change. As Safran shows, writers borrowed these types from many sources, including the novel of education produced by the Jewish enlightenment movement (the Haskalah), the political rhetoric of "Positivist" Polish nationalism, the Bible, Shakespeare, and Slavic folk beliefs.

Rewriting the Jew casts new light on the concept of type itself and on the question of whether literature can transfigure readers. The classic story of Jewish assimilation describes readers who redesign themselves after the model of fictional characters in secular texts. The writers studied here, though, examine attempts at Jewish self-transformation while wondering about the reformability of personality. In looking at their works, Safran relates the modern Eastern European Jewish experience to a fundamental question of aesthetics: Can art change us?

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
2002
1 de enero
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
296
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Stanford University Press
VENTAS
Stanford University Press
TAMAÑO
3.4
MB

Más libros de Gabriella Safran

Recording Russia Recording Russia
2022
The Whole World in a Book The Whole World in a Book
2019

Otros libros de esta serie

A Prophet Reads Scripture A Prophet Reads Scripture
1998
Maps of Women’s Goings and Stayings Maps of Women’s Goings and Stayings
2002
Menstrual Purity Menstrual Purity
2000
Identity Theft Identity Theft
2003
Politics and the Limits of Law Politics and the Limits of Law
2002
Web of Life Web of Life
2000