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In the wake of the spatial and affective turns in Literary Studies
in general, and the study of Jewish literatures in particular, this
volume shifts focus from the extensity of exile and return to the
intensities of sense of place and belonging across a moving
landscape of 20th and 20st century literatures, Jewish and other.
It brings together contemporary writers and literary scholars who
collectively map these intensities onto a bodily word world in
transit and textures of habitable, readable space as passage. Works
by Helene Cixous, Cecile Wajsbrot, Alex Epstein, Almog Behar, and
Svetlana Boym explore sites made up of layers of passages, taking
configurations of sayability and readability as forms, poetic and
political, of inhabiting the material world. The contributions by
literary scholars explore the theoretical potential of a mapping of
such sites in studies of modalities of belonging and unbelonging in
modern and contemporary works of literature. The volume collects a
collaborative investigation of the exigencies and potentialities of
sense of place and belonging through literature, Jewish and other.
It offers a literary perspective on current debates in a variety of
fields, including literary criticism, human geography,
architectural theory, and translation studies.
In the wake of the spatial and affective turns in Literary Studies
in general, and the study of Jewish literatures in particular, this
volume shifts focus from the extensity of exile and return to the
intensities of sense of place and belonging across a moving
landscape of 20th and 20st century literatures, Jewish and other.
It brings together contemporary writers and literary scholars who
collectively map these intensities onto a bodily word world in
transit and textures of habitable, readable space as passage. Works
by Helene Cixous, Cecile Wajsbrot, Alex Epstein, Almog Behar, and
Svetlana Boym explore sites made up of layers of passages, taking
configurations of sayability and readability as forms, poetic and
political, of inhabiting the material world. The contributions by
literary scholars explore the theoretical potential of a mapping of
such sites in studies of modalities of belonging and unbelonging in
modern and contemporary works of literature. The volume collects a
collaborative investigation of the exigencies and potentialities of
sense of place and belonging through literature, Jewish and other.
It offers a literary perspective on current debates in a variety of
fields, including literary criticism, human geography,
architectural theory, and translation studies.
The articles in this volume originated from a symposium organized
in 1994 by the Franz Rosenzweig Research Centre of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem. The aim was to elaborate a methodological
framework for research into German-Jewish intercultural identity,
centering on an attempt to define the 'intercultural space' between
two cultures. This space proves to be the condition both of
potential cultural renewal and of the real catastrophes occurring
in the context of intercultural encounter. The problem of
intercultural translation needs to be seen in terms of the theory
and practice of dialogue across this space, inasfar as the locus of
this problem is situated in the 'space' between translatability and
untranslatability.
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