Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Bruno Schulz (1892-1942) was a Polish writer and artist who murdered by the Nazis even as papers and plans for his escape had been prepared. In Bruno Schulz and Galician Jewish Modernity, Karen Underhill opens up the Jewish world of Eastern Europe to understand the cultural and political context of Schulz's work, but also the multi-lingual (Yiddish, Polish, and Hebrew) worlds that resonated through it.
Underhill discovered a 1937 article by Schulz that was made available through a digitization project of interwar periodicals in Ukraine. In it, Schulz openly presents his views on the contemporary political, cultural, and spiritual concerns of his Jewish generation in Poland and Eastern Europe. Using this article as a lens, Underhill returns to Schulz's literary texts with fresh eyes and reads them as direct expressions of his engagement with the Jewish questions of his day. The result is a unique textual encounter that opens a range of entry points into the complex Jewish world of Habsburg Galicia. Underhill shows Schulz as a confirmed modernist and affirmed diasporist even when this world was collapsing around him.
Synopsis
In the 1930s, through the prose of Bruno Schulz (1892-1942), the Polish language became the linguistic raw material for a profound exploration of the modern Jewish experience. Rather than turning away from the language like many of his Galician Jewish colleagues who would choose to write in Yiddish, Schulz used the Polish language to explore his own and his generation's relationship to East European Jewish exegetical tradition, and to deepen his reflection on golus or exile as a condition not only of the individual and of the Jewish community, but of language itself, and of matter. Drawing on new archival discoveries, this study explores Schulz's diasporic Jewish modernism as an example of the creative and also transient poetic forms that emerged on formerly Habsburg territory, at the historical juncture between empire and nation-state.