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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Studies in American Jewish Literature
    Angaben zur Quelle: 42,2 (2023) 158-185
    Keywords: Foer, Jonathan Safran, ; American fiction History and criticism ; Grandchildren of Holocaust survivors in literature ; Ukrainians in literature ; Male friendship in literature ; Sexual minorities in literature
    Abstract: Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything Is Illuminated (2002) follows the two protagonists and narrators of the novel, American descendent of Holocaust survivors Jonathan and Alexander Perchov, his Ukrainian translator and collaborator on the story that constitutes the book itself. This article analyzes a heretofore unconsidered element of the novel: the potential to read Alex as queer. The book's possible queer narrative is tragic, bittersweet at best, and overlooked by critics. This article illustrates how the character of Alex articulates what might be understood as a queer desire for Jonathan and considers new interpretive insights that might obtain within such a reading. In particular, it reconsiders the relationship between the men, as well as a critical stance that construes the novel's concluding chapters as Jonathan's rejection of cross-cultural friendship and collaboration. More important is the insight that a queer understanding of Everything Is Illuminated may provide with regard to the recent turn to the intersections between Jewish Studies and gender and LGBTQ+ theory. Understanding the potentially queer modes of Alex's expression enables us to consider how Foer disrupts binary identity categories while also highlighting the dangers inherent in positing a reductive likeness between Alex and Jonathan—or between queer and Jewish identities.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Studies in American Jewish Literature
    Angaben zur Quelle: 42,2 (2023) 121-140
    Keywords: Foer, Jonathan Safran, ; American fiction Jewish authors ; History and criticism ; Grandchildren of Holocaust survivors, Writings of History and criticism ; Intergenerational relations in literature ; Memory in literature ; Psychic trauma in literature ; Nostalgia in literature
    Abstract: This article presents a theoretical formulation that names an experience that is common to many third-generation protagonists in the literature written by the grandchildren of Holocaust survivors: postnostalgia. Postnostalgia is an adopted "nostalgia"—though it not actually nostalgia—for a place and a time that descendants have never lived but long for as if they have. This almost-form of "nostalgia" is powerful because it is an affective and persistent response to the particular places to which they are connected, given how their families once occupied those milieus. This article treats Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything Is Illuminated, which serves as a representation of how third-generation protagonists commonly attempt to discover pre-Shoah life by visiting the sites of family life in their family's native lands. This formulation of postnostalgia offers insight into how survivors' descendants in third-generation literature have responded to their inherited traumas, elucidating the common phenomenon of what is referred to as "pilgrimages" to sites of pre-Shoah family life.
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