Being For Myself Alone: Origins of Jewish Autobiography

Portada
Stanford University Press, 2005 M06 13 - 672 páginas
This is a work of unprecedented scope, tracing the origins of Jewish autobiographical writing from the early modern period to the early twentieth century. Drawing on a multitude of Hebrew and Yiddish texts, very few of which have been translated into English, and on contemporary autobiographical theory, this book provides a literary/historical explanatory paradigm for the emergence of the Jewish autobiographical voice. The book also provides the English reader with an introduction to the works of central figures in the history of Hebrew and Yiddish literature, and it includes discussion of material that has never been submitted to literary critical analysis in English.



 

Contenido

Generic Dilemmas
1
Autobiography as TextAutobiography as Discourse
37
3
67
17
75
Un coup de dés nabolira jamais
103
Scrolls of Lamentation and Lament
124
PreModern Jewish Autobiography and the Radical
194
103
217
Mordechai Aaron Guenzbergs
333
The Conception of the Child
344
Discourses on Power
353
Cultural Landscapes
377
Semiotics of Autobiographical Behaviour
412
Buried Autobiographies
422
Summons to AutobiographyResponse
438
Matrices of the Jewish Autobiographical Self
445

The Crystallization of an Autobiographical Hermeneutic
219
147
228
Michah Yosef Berdichevsky Before the Speculum
262
The Great Memory
268
The Summing Up
276
Jewish Autobiographical Writing at the Time of Rousseau
286
Time present and time pastAre both perhaps present
461
Notes
483
Bibliography
599
Index
625
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Referencias a este libro

Acerca del autor (2005)

Marcus Moseley is Associate Professor of German and Jewish Studies at Northwestern University and has taught Hebrew and Yiddish Literature at New York University, Harvard University, and Johns Hopkins University.

Información bibliográfica