1. Encountering the idea of America Julian Levinson; 2. Encountering English Hana Wirth-Nesher; 3. Encountering native origins Rachel Rubinstein; 4. Immigration and modernity, 1900-45 Werner Sollors; 5. Making it into the mainstream, 1945-70 Benjamin Schreier; 6. New voices, new challenges, 1970-2000 Michael Wood; 7. Religious selfhood, 1870-1950 Shira Wolosky; 8. Secularity, sacredness, and Jewish American poets, 1950-2000 Maeera Y. Shreiber; 9. Yiddish American poetry Avraham Novershtern; 10. Yiddish theater in America Nahma Sandrow; 11. Jewish American drama Edna Nahshon; 12. Jews and film Jonathan Freedman; 13. Hebrew in America Michael Weingrad; 14. Ladino in US literature and song Monique Rodrigues Balbuena; 15. Writing and remembering Jewish Middle Eastern pasts Dalia Kandiyoti; 16. The ghost of the Holocaust in the construction of Jewish American literature Emily Miller Budick; 17. Israel in the Jewish American imagination Naomi Sokoloff; 18. Their New York: possessing the 'capital of words' Murray Baumgarten; 19. Spaces of Yidishkayt: New York in American Yiddish prose Mikhail Krutikov; 20. Landscapes: America and the Americas Sarah Phillips Casteel; 21. Across the border: Canadian Jewish writing Rebecca Margolis; 22. The role of the public intellectual in American culture Jesse Raber; 23. The caravan returns: Jewish American literary anthologies, 1935-2010 Wendy I. Zierler; 24. Poetics and politics of translation Anita Norich; 25. Jews on America's racial map Adam Zachary Newton; 26. Gender poetics in Jewish American poetry Kathryn Hellerstein; 27. Performance: queerly Jewish/Jewishly queer in the American theater Alisa Solomon; 28. Jewish American comic books and graphic novels Laurence Roth; 29. Jewish American popular culture Stephen J. Whitfield; 30. Jewish humor in America Marc Caplan; 31. Since 2000 Josh Lambert.
This History presents a comprehensive history of Jewish American literature from its origins to the present day.
Hana Wirth-Nesher is the Samuel L. and Perry Haber Chair of the Study of the Jewish Experience in the United States and Professor of English and American Studies at Tel-Aviv University. She is the author of Call It English: The Languages of Jewish American Literature (2005) and City Codes: Reading the Modern Urban Novel (Cambridge, 1996). She is also the editor of New Essays on Call It Sleep (Cambridge, 1996), and The Cambridge Companion to Jewish American Literature (with Michael Kramer, Cambridge, 2003).
'... a masterly work of synthesis ... marks a milestone in [the]
institutionalization [of] Jewish-American writing ...' Morris
Dickstein, The Times Literary Supplement
'From a variety of perspectives, The Cambridge History of Jewish
American Literature provides an illuminating analysis of [the]
points of intersection, a vibrant cultural landscape that has
enriched America and invigorated Jewishness. This collection is a
logical starting point for anyone interested in exploring this
history.' Jarrod Tanny, The Review of Rabbinic Judaism
'... an unexpectedly coherent mosaic that stands as close to a
complete picture of the history of Jewish American literature as we
can imagine at this point in the early twenty-first century.' Joe
Kraus, MELUS
'In the face of the multifarious creativity so richly documented in
this expansive volume, no reasonable person could hold on to his or
her skepticism. I use the term multifarious on purpose to
underscore what I regard as one of the key choices in the
conception of the volume: to go wide and eschew canonicity.' Alan
Mintz, Studies in American Jewish Literature
'... we have in hand a Cambridge History of Jewish American
Literature that embraces, with exquisite critical attention and
traditional scholarly values, such diverse phenomena as the graphic
novel, stand-up comedy, film and video, gender-bending performance
art, and popular music ...' Esther Schor, Studies in American
Jewish Literature
'... this is a wonderful collection of essays, which extends our
understanding of, and at times redefines, the field of Jewish
American literature. The editor, Hana Wirth-Nesher, has done a
fabulous job, assembling a stellar list of contributors and
ensuring that ... they engage afresh with their material, producing
genuinely original work, rather than rehearsing previous research
or living off former glories.' David Brauner, Journal of Modern
Jewish Studies
'The volume is certainly rich and varied and expansive. To be sure,
its thirty-one chapters treat familiar subjects like immigrant
writing, Jewish American fiction at mid-century, Yiddish
literature, New York City as a site for creative expression,
overviews of Jewish American poetry, drama, popular culture, and
humor. But not only. There are also sections that invite
re-thinking of the geographic and linguistic boundaries of the
field, thus expanding our idea of what 'Jewish American literature'
(each term also under interrogation these days) represents as a
subject of academic inquiry. In this respect the Cambridge History
begins an important remapping of the field.' Donald Weber, Studies
in American Jewish Literature
'... a study like The Cambridge History has the opportunity both to
re-shape the canon of Jewish American literature and to offer
readers new historiographical lenses through which to read familiar
material.' Heather S. Nathans, Studies in American Jewish
Literature
'... scholars who ... read America with an enthusiastic but
skeptical eye for its occasional flashes of Jewish significance
have achieved the exact sorts of edifying and lively results that
fill the pages of the Cambridge History.' Michael Hoberman, Studies
in American Jewish Literature
"... captures both the vital and vitalizing multifariousness of the
field and also the editor's unique vision that gives that
multifariousness a conceptual coherence ...' Michael Kramer,
Studies in American Jewish Literature
'The Cambridge History of Jewish American Literature is indeed a
landmark, a superior assortment of field-defining essays, and a
testimony to scholarly activity and achievements in the rich
transnational, transcultural, polylingual field of Jewish American
literature.' Cheryl Lester, Philip Roth Studies
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