Language:
English
Year of publication:
2020
Titel der Quelle:
AJS Review
Angaben zur Quelle:
44,2 (2020) 286-316
Keywords:
Salten, Felix,
;
Salten, Felix, Appreciation
;
Austrian fiction Jewish authors
;
History and criticism
;
Austrian fiction Jewish authors
;
Translations
;
History and criticism
;
Deer in literature
;
Deer in art
;
Jewish art and symbolism Influence
;
Art, Israeli 20th century
;
Symbolism
Abstract:
This paper explores the visual sources that inspired Felix Salten's Bambi, Eine Lebensgeschichte aus dem Walde (1923), and its postpublication legacy in America, Poland, India, Israel, and Russia. While both Jewish and non-Jewish artists embraced the hunted deer motif as their own “national folktale,” the Jewish roots of the visual motif are critical to understanding the revisions and adaptations of the tale in the mid-twentieth century. The case of the myriad revamps of Bambi demonstrates that the nationalist idiom was so elastic in the mid-twentieth century that it functioned as an aesthetic mode rather than an a priori category of identity. At the center of the analysis is the contention that Jewish artists, filmmakers, and writers used the aesthetic properties of the nationalist idiom not only to forge a path to political agency but also to build a shelter from the nation-state.
DOI:
10.1017/S0364009420000070
URL:
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