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The Figure of Moses in Modern Hebrew Poetry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2004

Malka Shaked
Affiliation:
Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
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Extract

From its inception in the Enlightenment to this day, modern Hebrew poetry conveys a deep connection to the Bible that manifests itself in a variety of ways. An in-depth understanding of this connection—including its various expressions in content and language, its causes, its purposes, and its manifestations in all the literary genres, in each generation and for each individual writer—would require extensive research that could profitably occupy a large number of scholars. Nonetheless, even with the limited research that I have conducted, focusing on the place of the Bible in Hebrew poetry from the generation of national renaissance to the present time, the substantial anthology of poems that I am preparing for this purpose demonstrate clearly that modern Hebrew poetry constantly returns to the Bible, and that the Bible's oft-lamented decline in stature in Israeli society is nowhere to be seen.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 by the Association for Jewish Studies

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Footnotes

Translated by Harvey N. Bock.