
Women Writing Jewish Modernity, 1919-1939
Allison Schachter
(Author)Description
In Women Writing Jewish Modernity, 1919-1939, Allison Schachter rewrites Jewish literary modernity from the point of view of women. Focusing on works by interwar Hebrew and Yiddish writers, Schachter illuminates how women writers embraced the transgressive potential of prose fiction to challenge the patriarchal norms of Jewish textual authority and reconceptualize Jewish cultural belonging.
Born in the former Russian and Austro-Hungarian Empires and writing from their homes in New York, Poland, and Mandatory Palestine, the authors central to this book--Fradl Shtok, Dvora Baron, Elisheva Bikhovsky, Leah Goldberg, and Debora Vogel--seized on the freedoms of social revolution to reimagine Jewish culture beyond the traditionally male world of Jewish letters. The societies they lived in devalued women's labor and denied them support for their work. In response, their writing challenged the social hierarchies that excluded them as women and as Jews. As she reads these women, Schachter upends the idea that literary modernity was a conversation among men about women, with a few women writers listening in. Women writers revolutionized the very terms of Jewish fiction at a pivotal moment in Jewish history, transcending the boundaries of Jewish minority identities. Schachter tells their story and in so doing calls for a new way of thinking about Jewish cultural modernity.
Product Details
Publisher | Northwestern University Press |
Publish Date | December 15, 2021 |
Pages | 232 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780810144361 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 5.9 X 0.7 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Women Writing Jewish Modernity is a work of vital and substantial scholarship. It is--remarkably--the first study to frame the fiction written by women in Yiddish and Hebrew in the early twentieth century as a body of work that deserves consideration in its own right. Working against a strong current of misogyny, Schachter reveals, these authors were reflecting on the possibilities of storytelling to capture their experiences, desires, and aesthetic pleasures, and to imagine new forms of artistic and political community." --Na'ama Rokem, author of Prosaic Conditions: Heinrich Heine and the Spaces of Zionist Literature (Northwestern University Press, 2013)
"In the 1990s and early 2000s there was a flowering of feminist critical writing about Hebrew and Yiddish women poets. Schachter's book picks up where these various studies left off, focusing on important, neglected works of fiction that resisted nationalist, religious structures and conventional forms. Schachter attends to the details and experimental artistry of the writers' fiction, widening the lens to consider as well how the works speak to and respond to broader social and cultural aspects of modernism." --Wendy I. Zierler, author of And Rachel Stole the Idols: The Emergence of Modern Hebrew Women's Writing
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