Diaspora and Zionism in Jewish American Literature: Lazarus, Syrkin, Reznikoff, and Roth

앞표지
Brandeis University Press, 2002 - 341페이지
This interdisciplinary study explores the evolving representations of diaspora and Zionism in Jewish American writing from 1880 to the late 20th century. Beginning with the often neglected proto-Zionist verse of Emma Lazarus, through the urban and Holocaust-inflected lyrics of Marie Syrkin and Charles Reznikoff, to the post-assimilationist novels of Philip Roth in the 1990s, Ranen Omer-Sherman analyzes literary responses to the competing claims on the self made by this dual allegiance. He explores ethnic nationalism in the works of Lazarus; history and identity in the prose and verse of Syrkin and her husband Reznikoff; and considers the Jewish writer's relation to the loss of diasporic affliction as an organizing principle for Jewish life in the novels of Roth. Much more than just literary criticism, Omer-Sherman shows how this literature developed in direct relation to crucial phases in Jewish acculturation in the context of nativism, xenophobia, the holocaust, and a beckoning distant homeland.

도서 본문에서

목차

Acknowledgments xili
1
Emma Lazarus Zion
15
Marie Syrkin and
68
저작권

표시되지 않은 섹션 7개

기타 출판본 - 모두 보기

자주 나오는 단어 및 구문

이 책을 참조한 자료

Emma Lazarus
Esther Schor
짧은 발췌문 보기 - 2006
Emma Lazarus
Esther Schor
짧은 발췌문 보기 - 2006
모든 도서검색 결과 »

도서 문헌정보