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Overview:
FROM THE
PUBLISHER
What
makes a great Jewish book? What makes
a book "Jewish" in the first place?
Ruth R. Wisse, one of the leading
scholars in the field of Jewish
literature, sets out to answer these
questions in The Modern Jewish Canon.
Wisse takes us on an exhilarating
journey through language and culture,
penetrating the complexities of Jewish
life as they are expressed in the
greatest Jewish novels of the
twentieth century, from Isaac Babel to
Isaac Bashevis Singer, from Elie
Wiesel to Cynthia Ozick. The modern
Jewish canon Wisse proposes comprises
those books that convey an experience
of Jewish actuality, those in which
"the authors or characters know and
let the reader know that they are
Jews," for better or worse.
Wisse
is not content merely to evaluate the
great books of Jewish literature; she
also links the works together to
present a new kind of Jewish history,
as it has been told through the
literature of the past hundred years.
She tells the story of a multilingual,
multinational people, one that has
experienced an often turbulent
relationship with Hebrew (the
liturgical and scriptural language)
and Yiddish (the commonplace
vernacular tongue), as well as with
the numerous languages spoken by Jews
around the world. Wisse insists that
language informs the essential meaning
of a Jewish work, creating and
ratifying political and religious
alliances, historical and cultural
circumstance, and methods of
interpretation.
Drawing from a broad sweep of
twentieth-century Jewish fiction,
Wisse reintroduces us to the deeper
side of much-beloved books that remain
touchstones of Jewish identity.
Through her eyes we reencounter old
friends, including:
Tevye the Dairymanfrom Sholem
Aleichem's landmark Yiddish stories,
the character on whom Fiddler on the
Roof is based
Joseph K. of Kafka's The Trial, who
"without having done anything wrong"
was famously "arrested one fine
morning"
Anne Frank, whose poignant diary has
shaped the way we think about the
Holocaust
Nathan Zuckerman, the enigmatic
narrator of numerous Philip Roth
novels
Destined to be a classic in its own
right, one that reshapes the way we
think about some of the classic works
of the modern age, The Modern Jewish
Canon is a book for every Jewish
reader and for every reader of great
fiction. |