A SPECIAL ISSUE FOR THE FALL AND WINTER OF 2002/3
JEWISH IN AMERICA
EDITED BY SARA BLAIR AND JONATHAN FREEDMAN
FALL 2002 ISSUE
- This double issue of MQR brings together academic essays, high-level journalism, personal narratives,
fiction, poetry, and visual art responding to the transformations of Jewish experience in the United States during
the last fifty years, and, speculatively, extending into the twenty-first century. We offer writings that respond
to the multiplicity of representations, cultural forms, fashionings and refashionings, that have defined the experience
of Jews in America and continue to compel debate. These include works by Jews and non-Jews that engage contemporary
controversies in the fields of politics, sociocultural dynamics, the arts, and the relation of Jewish life in America
to other historical periods, other geographical places.
Contents for the Fall 2002 issue
- Introduction by Sara Blair and Jonathan Freedman
- A section of "Drashes" or short interpretive essays on some aspect of Jewish-American culture:
- Leonard Barkan, "Merchants of Venice"
- Herbert Gold, "Religion: Goy"
- Pearl Abraham, "If Only: Finding America in Hasidism"
- Louis Simpson, "The Jew's House"
- Stephen Greenblatt, "A Eulogy"
- Gregory Orfalea, "Valley Boys" [on Daniel Pearl]
- John Limon, "Don Rickles and Death"
- A memoir by Robert A. Rosenstone, "Izzy the Red," about his family and the romance of American communism.
- "Intifada Diptych," by Alisa Solomon, an essay on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and its significance for American Jews.
- "While Waiting for the Ferry to Cuba," by Ruth Behar, an essay about the making of her film Adio Kerida on the Jewish community in Cuba.
- "Why America Has Not Seemed Like Exile," by Stephen J. Whitfield, a study of the presence of Jewish culture in America, with plentiful examples of successful assimilation and ascendancy.
- New poems on the theme by Charles Bernstein, Daniel Mark Epstein, Leonard Nathan, Jacqueline Osherow, Robert Pinsky,
Esther Schor, Grace Schulman.
- New fiction by Sharon Pomerantz and Gerald Shapiro.
- A review-essay, "Arguing (What Else?) About Jewish-American Poetry," by Laurence Goldstein, on the anthologies and scholarship that seek to canonize a tradition.
Two volumes (Fall 2002 and Winter 2003), $9 each.
Both are available as part of a year's subscription, $25.
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