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The Inveterate Dreamer: Essays and Conversations on Jewish Culture
Contributor(s): Stavans, Ilan (Author)
ISBN: 0803292783     ISBN-13: 9780803292789
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
OUR PRICE:   $23.70  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: February 2001
Qty:
Annotation: Not only do "modern" Jewish languages like Yiddish and Hebrew have their own Jewish writers, but every major Western tongue -- from German and Russian to English and Portuguese -- does as well. These writers are often at the crossroad between the two traditions: their Jewish one and their own national one. Is there such a thing as a modern Jewish literary tradition, one navigating across linguistic and national lines? If so, how should one define it?

An Ashkenazic Jew who grew up in Mexico, Ilan Stavans is uniquely qualified to answer these questions and to comment on the power and challenges of cultural margins and literary crossings. This incomparable volume showcases Stavans's most insightful and provocative observations on modern Jewish culture and literature. Stavans explores the problems and prospects of representing Jewish experiences through such media as Holocaust memoirs and Jewish museums; astutely comments on well-known intellectual figures, including Lionel Trilling, Primo Levi, Harold Bloom, and Walter Benjamin; engages in memorable conversations with Norman Manea, Joseph Brodsky, and Ariel Dorfman; and offers compelling glimpses of revelatory moments in his own life.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
Dewey: 305.892
LCCN: 00044740
Series: Texts and Contexts
Physical Information: 0.65" H x 5.51" W x 8.49" (0.82 lbs) 306 pages
Themes:
- Ethnic Orientation - Jewish
- Religious Orientation - Jewish
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Not only do modern Jewish languages like Yiddish and Hebrew have their own Jewish writers, but every major Western tongue--from German and Russian to English and Portuguese--does as well. These writers are often at the crossroad between the two traditions: their Jewish one and their own national one. Is there such a thing as a modern Jewish literary tradition, one navigating across linguistic and national lines? If so, how should one define it? Ilan Stavans is uniquely qualified to answer these questions and to comment on the power and challenges of cultural margins and literary crossings. He has been at the forefront of an appreciation of the Jewish literary tradition that is less asphyxiating, more global. His reflections on Jewish Latin America have won him the nickname pathfinder. This incomparable volume showcases Stavans's most insightful and provocative--and at times controversial--observations on transnational Jewish culture and literature. Stavans explores the problems and prospects of representing Jewish experiences through such media as Holocaust memoirs and Jewish museums; astutely comments on well-known intellectual figures, including Lionel Trilling, Isaac Babel, Primo Levi, Harold Bloom, and Walter Benjamin; engages in memorable conversations with Norman Manea, Joseph Brodsky, and Ariel Dorfman; and offers compelling glimpses of revelatory moments in his own life.