Klezmer is a continually evolving musical tradition that grows
out of Eastern European Jewish culture, and its changes reflect
Jews' interaction with other groups as well as their shifting
relations to their own history. But what happens when, in the
klezmer spirit, the performances that go into the making of
Jewishness come into contact with those that build different forms
of cultural identity?
Jonathan Freedman argues that terms central to the Jewish
experience in America, notions like "the immigrant," the "ethnic,"
and even the "model minority," have worked and continue to
intertwine the Jewish-American with the experiences, histories, and
imaginative productions of Latinos, Asians, African Americans, and
gays and lesbians, among others. He traces these relationships in a
number of arenas: the crossover between jazz and klezmer and its
consequences in Philip Roth's "The Human Stain"; the relationship
between Jewishness and queer identity in Tony Kushner's "Angels in
America"; fictions concerning crypto-Jews in Cuba and the
Mexican-American borderland; the connection between Jews and
Christian apocalyptic narratives; stories of "new immigrants" by
Bharathi Mukherjee, Gish Jen, Lan Samantha Chang, and Gary
Shteyngart; and the revisionary relation of these authors to the
classic Jewish American immigrant narratives of Henry Roth, Bernard
Malamud, and Saul Bellow. By interrogating the fraught and
multidimensional uses of Jews, Judaism, and Jewishness, Freedman
deepens our understanding of ethnoracial complexities.
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