This richly suggestive book examines the common bonds of thought
and shared manner of expression that unite Jewish writers working
in America, Eastern Europe, and Israel. Murray Baumgarten shows how
Jewish traditions are reflected in the themes and narrative style
of a diverse group of writers, including Saul Bellow, Henry Roth,
Sholom Aleichen, Isaac Babel, and S.Y. Agnon.
Baumgarten finds in these writers a distinctive and symbolic
use of the urban scene arid style of life whether the city is
Brooklyn, Chicago, Vienna, Warsaw, Odessa, or Jerusalem. He
examines the pariah stance, and the different kinds of tension
between freedom from communal ties and the pull of traditional
culture. He demonstrates how Yiddish can flavor and inflect the
syntax, how scripture can permeate the thinking and narrative
devices, in writers of various nationalities.
General
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