Language:
English
Year of publication:
2018
Titel der Quelle:
Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
Angaben zur Quelle:
17 (2018) 15-33
Keywords:
Brenner, Joseph Hayyim, Criticism and interpretation
;
Hebrew fiction, Modern History and criticism
;
Jewish authors
;
Modernism (Literature)
;
Nineteen tens
;
National characteristics in literature
Abstract:
This article addresses the revolutionary first modernist chapter in the history of Hebrew literature as reflected and shaped in the prose of the Hebrew writer Yosef Ḥayim Brenner during the first decade of the twentieth century. These turbulent years, which were marked by violent atrocities, massive population movements across borders, and increasing economic distress, brought about the rise of the earliest form of Hebrew literary modernism within Eastern European Jewish society. This article approaches this development as a crisis of spectatorship. Being the prior condition for any act of representation of reality, spectatorship was problematized in times when the Hebrew narrator was looking for, and could not find, a vantage point from which he could observe this reality. For Brenner, the problem of gaze and vision appeared as the most acute kinship to the political-aesthetic form of Jewish modern experience. Thus, through his ongoing debate on the status of vision – imbued with a strong impulse of criticism of sovereign power – he sketched the new contours of Hebrew modernist aesthetics.
DOI:
10.13109/9783666370809.15
URL:
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