8. The critic’s “I”
2021 ◽
pp. 81-92
Keyword(s):
“The critic’s “I”” argues that Jewish literature is not only what writers and readers do, but also the degree to which critics are constantly contextualizing it. Cultural thinkers like Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, Irving Howe, and Alfred Kazin, through a discerning “I” and a penetrating eye, allow literature to speak to society and vice versa. There is an important role for public intellectuals who have a connections with, or away from, institutions of higher learning. It is worth looking at the cases of Susan Sontag and Harold Bloom. Without criticism, literature is incapable of lasting meaning. In the case of Jewish literature, critics become torchbearers of transnational ideas.
2019 ◽
Vol 1
(1)
◽
pp. 16
2014 ◽
Vol 31
(3)
◽
pp. 50-69
2017 ◽
2000 ◽
Vol 28
(2)
◽
pp. 28-34
◽
Keyword(s):
1984 ◽
Vol 43
◽
pp. 6-7
◽