Self as Nation: Contemporary Hebrew Autobiography

Self as Nation: Contemporary Hebrew Autobiography

by Tamar S. Hess
Self as Nation: Contemporary Hebrew Autobiography

Self as Nation: Contemporary Hebrew Autobiography

by Tamar S. Hess

eBook

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Overview

Theorists of autobiography tend to emphasize the centrality of the individual against the community. By contrast, in her reading of Hebrew autobiography, Tamar Hess identifies the textual presence and function of the collective and its interplay with the Israeli self. What characterizes the ten writers she examines is the idea of a national self, an individual whose life story takes on meaning from his or her relation to the collective history and ethos of the nation. Her second and related argument is that this self—individually and collectively—must be understood in the context of waves of immigration to Israel’s shores. Hess convincingly shows that autobiography is a transnational genre deeply influenced by the nation’s literary as well as cultural history. This book makes an additional contribution to the history of autobiography and contemporary autobiography theory by analyzing the strategies of fragmentation that many of the writers Hess studies have adopted as ways of dealing with the conflicts between the self and the nation, between who they feel they are and what they are expected to be. Hess contrasts the predominantly masculine tradition of Hebrew autobiography with writings by women, and offers a fresh understanding of the Israeli soul and the Hebrew literary canon. A systematic review of contemporary Hebrew autobiography, this study raises fundamental questions essential to the debates about identity at the heart of Israeli culture today. It will interest scholars and students of contemporary Israeli culture, as well as those intrigued by the literary genre of autobiography.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611689662
Publisher: Brandeis University Press
Publication date: 08/02/2016
Series: The Schusterman Series in Israel Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 213
File size: 853 KB

About the Author

TAMAR HESS is Sidney and Betty Sarah Berg Senior Lecturer in Hebrew Language in the Department of Hebrew Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments • Introduction: Hebrew Autobiography—Nation, Relation, and Narration • “To Be a Jew among Jews”: The Reluctant Israeli Native in Yoram Kaniuk • “I Have a Pain in My Mother”: Natan Zach and Haim Be’er • Languages of Immigration: Shimon Ballas and Aharon Appelfeld • Gendered Margins: Narrative Strategies, Embodied Selves, and Subversion in Women’s Autobiography • Conclusion: Prophets and Hedgehogs • Notes • Credits • Index

What People are Saying About This

Paul John Eakin

“In this finely crafted, upbeat study of Hebrew autobiography, Tamar Hess probes intergenerational family dynamics to draw a complex and richly nuanced portrait of Israeli national identity experience.”

Nancy K. Miller

“Hess’s penetrating study of autobiography illuminates with extraordinary precision the debates about identity at the heart of Israeli culture today. The beautifully written pages of Self as Nation lay bare the inevitably imbricated relations between selfhood and nationality, memory and history, inheritance and community. Self as Nation marks a major contribution both to the field of autobiography studies and to the tradition of Hebrew literature.”

Nili Scharf Gold

“Self as Nation is a brilliant and original analysis of the surprising transformations of the classical genre of autobiography in Israel. Hess takes the reader through a penetrating reading of the texts while providing a revolutionary perspective on the evolution of the Israeli ‘self.’ The book offers a unique insight—rare in its optimism—into how autobiography takes its place within the nation’s story.”

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