Michael Chabon's the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay: The Return of the Golem (Critical Essay) Michael Chabon's the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay: The Return of the Golem (Critical Essay)

Michael Chabon's the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay: The Return of the Golem (Critical Essay‪)‬

Studies in American Jewish Literature 2010, Annual, 29

    • 4.0 • 4 Ratings
    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Michael Chabon's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, is marked by intricacy of plot structure and sophisticated use of language. Critics unanimously praised the work: The New York Times found the novel to be a "towering achievement," while the Denver Post described the author as a "literary Houdini." The novel utilizes different genres of creative writing including that of referencing comics in telling the story of both Prague-born Joseph Kavalier, who escapes from Europe on the eve of the Shoah, and his New York cousin Sammy Clay, nee Klayman. In the process, Chabon's plot plays out against the background of America's pre-war isolationist policy that advocated an escape from moral responsibility. The novel in fact employs the metaphor of escape as a governing principle. Kavalier studies with an escape artist before escaping his natal city and the Shoah; Sammy overcomes or escapes the limitations of his physical handicap; the Holocaust is dealt with only obliquely. Kavalier & Clay is comprised of two narratives, a longer and a shorter one. The former story deals with America and the history of the comic book industry and its oppression of creative artists between 1939 and 1955. The latter story treats response to the Holocaust in a distinctive yet problematic manner. Very few critics have, however, analyzed the novel in terms of Holocaust representation in the third, non-witnessing, generation of American-born novelists. Consequently, important issues such as the moral role of fiction, the relationship of imagination to history, and the contemporary use of Jewish myth in representing the Shoah have been largely elided.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2010
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
19
Pages
PUBLISHER
Purdue University Press
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
206.2
KB

Customer Reviews

RDConnelly ,

Pretty thin

Some useful ideas about third generation novelists of the holocaust, US isolationism, futility of revenge, etc..
I'd just like the author to confirm that it was the Antarctic, not Alaska, where Joe was sent. Such a mistake makes me wonder how closely the author was paying attention.

More Books by Studies in American Jewish Literature

A Theology of Meaning: Hasidism and Deconstruction in Elie Wiesel's Souls on Fire. A Theology of Meaning: Hasidism and Deconstruction in Elie Wiesel's Souls on Fire.
2009
Potok's Asher Lev: Orthodoxy and Art: The Core-To-Core Paradox (My Name Is Asher Lev) (Critical Essay) Potok's Asher Lev: Orthodoxy and Art: The Core-To-Core Paradox (My Name Is Asher Lev) (Critical Essay)
2010
The Flight of Lilith: Modern Jewish American Feminist Literature (Essay) The Flight of Lilith: Modern Jewish American Feminist Literature (Essay)
2010
Saul Bellow's Enigmatic Love (Essay) Saul Bellow's Enigmatic Love (Essay)
2010
Malamud's Early Stories: In and out of Time, 1940-1960, with Humor, History, And Hawthorne (Bernard Malamud) (Critical Essay) Malamud's Early Stories: In and out of Time, 1940-1960, with Humor, History, And Hawthorne (Bernard Malamud) (Critical Essay)
2010
Two Views of Jews: Bernard Malamud, Maurice Samuel, And the Beilis Case (Blood Accusation Case Against Mendel Beilis) (Critical Essay) Two Views of Jews: Bernard Malamud, Maurice Samuel, And the Beilis Case (Blood Accusation Case Against Mendel Beilis) (Critical Essay)
2010