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Hardcover The Blessing and the Curse: The Jewish People and Their Books in the Twentieth Century Book

ISBN: 0393652408

ISBN13: 9780393652406

The Blessing and the Curse: The Jewish People and Their Books in the Twentieth Century

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Following The People and the Books, which "covers more than 2,500 years of highly variegated Jewish cultural expression" (Robert Alter, New York Times Book Review), poet and literary critic Adam Kirsch now turns to the story of modern Jewish literature. From the vast emigration of Jews out of Eastern Europe to the Holocaust to the creation of Israel, the twentieth century transformed Jewish life. The same was true of Jewish writing: the novels, plays, poems, and memoirs of Jewish writers provided intimate access to new worlds of experience.

Kirsch surveys four themes that shaped the twentieth century in Jewish literature and culture: Europe, America, Israel, and the endeavor to reimagine Judaism as a modern faith. With discussions of major books by over thirty writers--ranging from Franz Kafka to Philip Roth, Elie Wiesel to Tony Kushner, Hannah Arendt to Judith Plaskow--he argues that literature offers a new way to think about what it means to be Jewish in the modern world. With a wide scope and diverse, original observations, Kirsch draws fascinating parallels between familiar writers and their less familiar counterparts. While everyone knows the diary of Anne Frank, for example, few outside of Israel have read the diary of Hannah Senesh. Kirsch sheds new light on the literature of the Holocaust through the work of Primo Levi, explores the emergence of America as a Jewish home through the stories of Bernard Malamud, and shows how Yehuda Amichai captured the paradoxes of Israeli identity.

An insightful and engaging work from "one of America's finest literary critics" (Wall Street Journal), The Blessing and the Curse brings the Jewish experience vividly to life.

Customer Reviews

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An intelligent literary tour of the Jewish spirit in the 20th century

If Jews are the only people who relate to their God primarily in and through human history, Adam Kirsch's book raises the question, what has that people been doing in the century just past? For answers, Kirsch turns to the thing he knows best: writing. Going from European Jewish writers before World War II, such as Franz Kafka and Arthur Schnitzler, to writers who lived through the Holocaust like Elie Wiesel and Primo Levi, to American Jewish Writers like Saul Bellow and Cynthia Ozick, to an array of stellar Israelis (all well recognized though met for the first time by this reader) and winding up with the thinkers-of-the-Ultimate like Martin Buber and Abraham Joshua Heschel (the coinage is mine since Judaism doesn't invite theologians) Kirsch is truthful, insightful, sensitive and morally serious. It doesn't get much better than that. One reads with appreciative pleasure a critic who can make sense of a many-layered world.
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