print view
English 279.301
Modern Jewish-American Literature: Voice, Culture, and the Jewish Writer in Postwar America
Jennifer Glaser profile

TR 4:30-6
Fulfills Sector 2: Language, Literature and Culture of the English Standard Major
Fulfills Sector 6: 20th Century Literature of the English Standard Major
Fulfills Free Elective of the English Standard Major

 

Guilt, devotion, exile, shtick, messianism, boredom, tradition, voice, sex.  Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, Cynthia Ozick, Bernard Malamud, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Allen Ginsberg.  As critic Morris Dickstein put it, “The work of these writers proved deliberately provocative, hugely entertaining, always flirting with bad taste and often very funny, but with an edge of pain and giddiness that borders on hysteria.”  This course will study the “deliberately provocative” postwar Jewish writer in modern America.  What made the Jewish American writer so radical?  How did the postwar Jewish American writer become the archetypical American author?  Why have Jewish American writers turned out to be lightning rods for changes in twentieth century American culture, and its shifting landscape of race, ethnicity, gender, and the individual? Looking first at the core generation of postwar Jewish American authors (such as Bellow, Malamud, and Roth) and then at the newest wave of writers such as Michael Chabon, Dara Horn, Gary Shteyngart, and Nathan Englander, we will address the thorny question of just what makes a Jewish American writer in modern America. Course requirements include a short mid-term paper, a longer final paper with a research component, and engagement in class materials and discussion.



updated 2007-12-05
 
 
 
 


©2008 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania
Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
Webmaster/Contact: briankir@english.upenn.edu