dc.description.abstract | OVERVIEW:
In this course we first consider the thorny question: What Is (and Is Not) Jewish
American literature? Each word – Jewish, American, and literature – invites a series of
further questions. As the scholar Hana Wirth-Nesher has noted, “American Jewish
literature . . . has emerged as a recognizable corpus of work in the American literary
tradition, although criteria for admission into this canon remain problematic, as
recalcitrant as criteria for determining definitions of Jewishness itself.”¶
Having arrived at a working understanding of American Jewish literature’s boundaries,
we will trace the genre’s development from late nineteenth century works about
immigrants living in teeming tenements in New York City’s Lower East Side to the
present, with a special emphasis on works by modern day writers. Along the way, we
will explore themes related to immigration and Americanization, the impact of the
Holocaust, Jewish self-identity and stereotypes, the Jewish family, intergenerational
struggles, and more.¶
As we read our way through works by over a dozen authors – stretching from Emma
Lazarus’ famous “The New Colossus” to Dara Horn’s People Love Dead Jews: Reports
from a Haunted Present – we will consider the many ways in which Jewish American
writers have shaped and reshaped the genre over time. (And we will consider the reasons
why some authors have embraced and others have rejected the label of “Jewish American
writer.”) We will also focus upon broad themes regarding authorship, identity, group
identity, and the boundary between fact and fiction.¶
We will study works by major writers of the past, including Abraham Cahan, Anzia
Yezierska, Bernard Malamud, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, Grace
Paley, and Cynthia Ozick. And we will read works by major writers of the present,
including Allegra Goodman, Nicole Krauss, Nathan Englander, and Dara Horn. We will
also read a series of essays, by and about these authors, that will help us to understand,
and engage in, the ongoing debate about the role and permissible range of Jewish
American literature.¶
To add another dimension to our consideration of Jewish American Literature we will
also watch and discuss several notable films: The Jazz Singer (1927), Gentleman’s
Agreement (1947), and Crossing Delancey (1988).¶
OBJECTIVES
Through class discussions and written assignments, students will learn to reflect critically
on the tradition of Jewish American Literature. Specifically, for the written assignments,
they will be guided to express their own interpretations of particular works we read and
view. So too, they will become familiar with the specific debates surrounding Jewish
American Literature and the evolution of the genre. Additionally, they will gain an
appreciation for the interdisciplinary practice of American Studies, as we consider the
cultural and historical contexts that influenced the authors and are reflected in their
works. | en_US |