Jewish Presence in T.S. Eliot and Franz KafkaScholars Press, 1986 - 217 pagini Analyzes the importance and the literary and moral implications of the antisemitic component in Eliot's poetry and prose published between 1918-35. Places it within the context of American antisemitic and racist prejudices in the cultural elite of New England and the Midwest, and of anti-Jewish stereotypes in English literature. Discusses the antisemitic elements in works by other American writers molded in the same tradition, especially Henry Adams (1838-1918). Asserts that the Jews represent, in Eliot's vision, the negative aspects of modern civilization. Notes that explicit antisemitism disappeared from his writings after 1935, but he never reevaluated or expressed regret for his previous anti-Jewish leanings. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 3 din 23
Pagina 89
... German , even felt alienated from the German language , insofar as it lacked , for him , the intimacy he appreciated in Czech ( Letters to Milena 30 ) , and Yiddish ( Diaries : 1910-13 111 ) . The German that Kafka spoke and wrote ...
... German , even felt alienated from the German language , insofar as it lacked , for him , the intimacy he appreciated in Czech ( Letters to Milena 30 ) , and Yiddish ( Diaries : 1910-13 111 ) . The German that Kafka spoke and wrote ...
Pagina 90
... ( German ) . Kafka's observations concerning the Yiddish and Czech literary traditions stresses their advantages in a way that suggests that Kafka did not take for granted a place for his own writing in the main stream of German ...
... ( German ) . Kafka's observations concerning the Yiddish and Czech literary traditions stresses their advantages in a way that suggests that Kafka did not take for granted a place for his own writing in the main stream of German ...
Pagina 126
... German , upon his arrival in Prague , for reasons mainly eco- nomic , he joined the German Jewish community . Soon after Hermann's arrival , and while he was still living amid the squalid poverty of the Judenstadt , he met and married ...
... German , upon his arrival in Prague , for reasons mainly eco- nomic , he joined the German Jewish community . Soon after Hermann's arrival , and while he was still living amid the squalid poverty of the Judenstadt , he met and married ...
Cuprins
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE ANTISEMITISM OF ELIOTS POETRY | 11 |
THE AMERICAN BACKGROUNDS | 31 |
Drept de autor | |
3 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Termeni și expresii frecvente
accept Adams alienation American anti-Semitism appeared arrest attitude become belief Book Burbank calls Christian civilization completely conception concerning Court critics culture Dearest Father denied described discussion Eliot England English evidence example existence experience explain expression fact faith feeling Franz Kafka friends Gentile German Gerontion given God's guilt Henry hope human identity immigrants important innocence Jewish Jews Job's Joseph K Joseph K.'s Judaic Judaism Judge justice Kafka knowledge learns less Letters literary literature live man's Mark means modern moral nature never nevertheless novel original parable particular poem poetry possibility Pound Prague present question reason recognized reference regard relation relationship religion religious remains representative reveals salvation seems seen sense significance social speak spiritual suffering suggests symbolic T. S. Eliot thinking thought tradition Trial turn ultimate understanding understood universal writing written York
Referințe la această carte
T.S. Eliot's Bleistein Poems: Uses of Literary Allusion in Burbank with a ... Patricia Sloane Vizualizare fragmente - 2000 |
Loathsome Jews and Engulfing Women: Metaphors of Projection in the Works of ... Andrea Freud Loewenstein Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 1995 |