Acknowledgements
Note on Transliteration and Translation
General Introduction. A Rhetoric of Empowerment
Of Their Time and Their Places: A Biographical Introduction to the
Self-Evaluative Writers
Chapter 1. Holding Out for a Hero: Crisis and the New Hebrew
Man
Chapter 2. "He Needs a Stage": Masculinity, Homosociality and the
Public Sphere
Chapter 3. Contested Masculinity and the Redemption of the
Schlemiel
Chapter 4. Homosexual Panic and Masculinity's Advancement
Chapter 5. Self-Evaluative Masculinity's Interwar Apex and
Eclipse
Afterword. The Lesson, Legacy, and Implications of Self-Evaluative
Masculinity
Selected Bibliography
Index
Philip Hollander is Assistant Professor of Israeli Literature and Culture at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He has published numerous articles and chapters dealing with Hebrew, Jewish and Israeli literature, film, and culture.
"While the macho New Jew was admired as an ideal and has been the
focus of much scholarship, Philip Hollander shows how a number of
important Hebrew writers of the early days of the Yishuv were
pursing alternative ideals."—Naomi Sokoloff, editor of Gender and
Text in Modern Hebrew and Yiddish Literature
"Philip Hollander traces the image of the Israeli as the New or
Muscle Jew and the role that gender, sexuality, and stereotype had
in the formation of a new society."—Stephen Katz, author of Red,
Black, and Jew
"Hollander tells an absolutely fascinating story about the
formation of language and gendered identities in the revolutionary
context of Zionist aesthetics and politics."—Ranen Omer-Sherman,
author of Imagining the Kibbutz: Visions of Utopia in Literature
and Film
"Hollander convincingly demonstrates the role of gender and
sexuality in forming the Israeli state and in doing so demonstrates
the place of literature as a force in politics as much as in the
formation of culture."—ChoicdF
"Philip Hollander sheds light on developments in Hebrew literature
at the turn of the twentieth century that complicate and enrich our
understanding of this period. Eschewing any simple equation of
literary representation with masculine role modeling, Hollander
identifies a cluster of male writers as advocates for
"Self-Evaluative" masculinity."—Anne Golomb Hoffman - Fordham
University, AJS Review
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