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Art and the Artist in the Contemporary Israeli Novel (Hardcover)
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Art and the Artist in the Contemporary Israeli Novel (Hardcover)
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Art and the Artist in the Contemporary Israeli Novel presents
studies of eight contemporary works of Israeli fiction by eight
major Israeli novelists. It deals with a society where drama, lived
in reality but also in the mind, is a central moving force. What
this book shows is the ways these texts deal with the themes of
creativity and the creation of a work of art and with the way art
and artists are portrayed in a culture that is often perceived as
being otherwise preoccupied. The book involves close and
painstaking readings of these novels and travels along a broad
spectrum of themes. It also shows how these texts engage in
dialogue with texts of the Jewish tradition, on the one hand, and,
on the other hand, with each other. Two major points of the book
are its emphasis on the work as literary art and the way the same
themes often find their way into the varied works created by this
literary generation. The book notes two tendencies among Israeli
writers: that there is a great "urge to tell" their story and the
story of Israel; and that to make clear not only what is
"happening" in these novels but also what is "going on" in their
works of art, the novelist take the leisurely route of "literary
emerging"- slowly but surely leading the reader to see how art
emerges from the most prosaic of events. Despite its easygoing
tone, the book still claims to be a serious book, dealing with
serious issues, both ethical and metaphysical. One of the cases
this book endeavors to make is that one of the main goals of
contemporary Israeli writers is to insert their works of art-via a
midrashic mode of writing in which previous texts are constantly
being re-written and being made modern-as links in the great chain
of the Jewish textual tradition. These novels often refer back to
biblical tales and to rabbinic ways of reading them. But they also
demonstrate how the writers themselves and their books and are also
a part of that tradition. Most of all, however, these writers are
supremely aware that they are artists and that they have a
particular responsibility to their art.
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