Bültmann & Gerriets
Jewish Primitivism
von Samuel J Spinner
Verlag: Stanford University Press
Reihe: Stanford Studies in Jewish His
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-5036-2827-4
Erschienen am 27.07.2021
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 230 mm [H] x 154 mm [B] x 22 mm [T]
Gewicht: 544 Gramm
Umfang: 272 Seiten

Preis: 80,00 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

"Around the beginning of the twentieth century, Jewish writers and artists across Europe began depicting fellow Jews as savages or "primitive" tribesmen. Primitivism--the European appreciation of and fascination with so-called "primitive," non-Western peoples who were also subjugated and denigrated--was a powerful artistic critique of the modern world and was adopted by Jewish writers and artists to explore the urgent questions surrounding their own identity and status in Europe as insiders and outsiders. Jewish primitivism found expression in a variety of forms in Yiddish, Hebrew, and German literature, photography, and graphic art, including in the work of figures such as Franz Kafka, Y.L. Peretz, S. An-sky, Uri Zvi Greenberg, Else Lasker-Schèuler, and Moèi Ver. In Jewish Primitivism, Samuel J. Spinner argues that these and other Jewish modernists developed a distinct primitivist aesthetic that, by locating the savage present within Europe, challenged the idea of the threatening savage other from outside Europe on which much primitivism relied: in Jewish primitivism, the savage is already there. This book offers a new assessment of modern Jewish art and literature and shows how Jewish primitivism troubles the boundary between observer and observed, cultured and "primitive," colonizer and colonized"--



Samuel J. Spinner is Assistant Professor and holds the Zelda and Myer Tandetnik Professorship in Yiddish Language, Literature, and Culture at Johns Hopkins University.



Introduction
1. The Beginnings of Jewish Primitivism: Folklorism and Peretz
2. The Plausibility of Jewish Primitivism
3. The Possibility of Jewish Primitivism: Kafka
4. The Politics of Jewish Primitivism: Else Lasker-Schüler and Uri Zvi Grinberg
5. The Aesthetics of Jewish Primitivism I: Der Nister's Literary Abstraction
6. The Aesthetics of Jewish Primitivism II: Avant-Garde Photography and the Shtetl
Conclusion


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