scholarly journals Six Found Poems

1944 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Pryer

This group of six found poems explores the interrelated themes of identity, hybridity and liminality. They grew from a period of reading that the author undertook in order to more fully understand her family’s Anglo-Irish identity, and the significance of her “accidental” discovery of a Jewish heritage – a long-buried family secret.

Author(s):  
Ilan Zvi Baron

Questions arose about what it meant to support a country whose political future the author has no say in as a Diaspora Jew. The questions became all the more pronounced the more I learned about Israel’s history. Many Jews feel the same way, and often are uncomfortable with what such an obligation can mean, in no small part because of concerns over being identified with Israel because of one’s Jewish heritage or because of the overwhelming significance that Israel has come to have for Jewish identity. Israel’s significance is matched by how much is published about Israel. Increasingly, this literature is not only about trying to explain Israel’s wars, the military occupation or other parts of its history, but about the relationship between Diaspora1 Jewry and Israel.


2001 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 260-262
Author(s):  
Tadhg O'keeffe
Keyword(s):  

2001 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth Ober

Although the noted nineteenth-century Danish-Jewish writer Meïr Goldschmidt (1819–1887) made his entry into literature with a novel on Jewish themes, his later novels treated non-Jewish subjects, and his Jewish heritage appeared progressively to recede into the background of his public image. Literary historians have paid little attention to his complex perception of his own Jewishness and have made no effort to discover the immense significance he himself felt that Judaism had for his life and for his literary works. Moreover, no previous study has comprehensively treated Goldschmidt’s far-reaching network of interrelationships with an astonishing number of other major Jewish cultural figures of nineteenth-century Europe. During his restless travels crisscrossing Europe, which were facilitated by his phenomenal knowledge of the major European languages, he habitually sought out and associated with the leading Jewish figures in literature, the arts, journalism, and religion, but this fact and the resulting mutually influential connections he formed have been overlooked and ignored. This is the first focused and documented study of the Jewish aspect of Goldschmidt’s life, so vitally important to Goldschmidt himself and so indispensable to a complete understanding of his place in Danish and in world literatures.


1970 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 30
Author(s):  
Pablo Fabião Lisboa ◽  
Alexandre Vieira Maschio

Este trabalho aborda a interação humano-tecnologia no âmbito dos museus e do patrimônio cultural urbano a partir de uma contextualização teórica e da descrição dos procedimentos adotados pelo Museum of Jewish Heritage (New York City, EUA) e pela Gallery One do The Cleveland Museum of Art (Cleveland, EUA).


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