Synopses & Reviews
Israeli literature provides a unique lens for viewing the inner dynamics of this small but critically important society. In addition, its leading writers such as S. Y. Agnon, Yehuda Amichai, Amos Oz, and A. B. Yehoshua, among others, are recognized internationally as major world literary figures. Despite this international recognition, the rich literary tradition of Israeli literature has failed to reverberate and find significant readership or a following in America even among the American Jewish community.Alan L. Mintz traces the reception of Israeli literature in America from the 1970s to the present. He analyzes the influences that have shaped modern Israeli literature and reflects on the cultural differences that have impeded American and American Jewish appreciation of Israeli authors. Mintz then turns his attention to specific writers, examining their reception or lack thereof in America and places them within the emerging unfolding critical dialogue between the Israeli and American literary culture.
Table of Contents
Nostalgia and apocalypse : Israeli literature in the 1970s -- The boom in Israeli fiction : an overview -- Agnon as modernist : the contours of a career -- The critique of the German-Jewish ethos in Agnon's Shira -- Between Holocaust and homeland : Agnon's "The sign" as inauguration story -- The unknown Appelfeld -- Constructing and deconstructing the mystique of Sephardism in Yehoshua's Mr. Mani and Journey to the end of the millennium -- David Grossman's postmodernist ambitions -- Revising the founders : telling and retelling in Meir Shalev's The blue mountain -- Concluding theological meditation : Hebrew literature as a source of modern Jewish thought.