Overview: Jewish American Literature
Jewish American
literature has chronicled and paralleled the Jewish American experience. It
depicts the struggles of immigrant life, the stable yet alienated middle-class
existence that followed, and finally the unique challenges of cultural
acceptance: assimilation and the reawakening of tradition.
There are many
works of literature that depict the life of the Jewish immigrant. The heroes of
these works tend to be young men or boys who are trying to establish financial
viability in the New World while fighting with the demons of traditional Jewish
life and family. Abraham Cahan's The Rise of David Levinsky (1917)
follows David from a Russian shtetl (village)--where an Easter pogrom
took the life of his mother--to his ascension in America as a successful, yet
emotionally devastated clothing manufacturer. Another classic work of immigrant
literature, Henry Roth's Call it Sleep (1934), was one of only two books
unanimously voted to the Yiddish Book Center's top 100 modern Jewish books. Call
it Sleep uses Yiddish and butchered English to articulate the conflict
between new and old cultures. It chronicles the disintegration of Jewish
tradition and Jewish law. Anzia Yezierska, a Russian immigrant who worked in
the New York sweatshops, was another important chronicler of immigrant life.
Bernard Malamud,
Saul Bellow, and Philip Roth are the masters of Jewish American fiction. Among
them they received seven National Book Awards (including six in an 18-year
period), three Pulitzer Prizes (one each), and a Nobel Prize (Bellow, 1976).
Malamud, Bellow, and Roth wrote about Jews rooted in America, who nonetheless\
suffer from alienation. Like his predecessors, some of Malamud's main
characters--like Morris Bober in The Assistant (1957)--are immigrants.
However, Bober is not trying to make it in America. He has already failed. At
mid-century, writers like Malamud began to analyze the problems with the
American experiment.
Though Bellow is
arguably the most revered Jewish American writer, his characters and themes are
not overtly Jewish. Bellow, who grew up speaking Yiddish in an Orthodox Jewish
home, never locates his characters in this culture. Nevertheless, figures like
the Holocaust survivor Artur Sammler in Mr. Sammler's Planet (1969) and
the schlemiel Moses Herzog in Herzog (1964) navigate their
existences in dialogue with their Jewish identities.
Roth is the
great chronicler of second-generation American Jewry. His characters, by and
large, are the children of those Jews who worked their tails off to enter the
middle class and do not intend on letting their children forget it. Roth writes
about Jews who are financially comfortable yet culturally adrift. Because of
their comfort, they can afford to be critical of both their Jewish and American
worlds. So instead of feeling more at home in America, they feel even more
alienated.
Caught in a no
man's land between the universalism of American culture and the particularism
of Jewish culture, Jewish American writers have, in recent years, opted for the
latter. Cynthia Ozick is the matriarch of this movement. In books like The
Cannibal Galaxy (1984) and The Shawl (1989), Ozick overtly addresses
Jewish themes and teachings.
However, comfort
with Jewish content does not negate conflict. Contemporary writers such as
Rebecca Goldstein negotiate the friction between feminism and Judaism, while
writers such as Thane Rosenbaum and Melvin Bukiet discuss the unique conflicts
of children of Holocaust survivors. The Holocaust has always been a dominant
force in American Jewish communal identity, but only recently have writers
begun to make sense of this relationship. Similarly, the relationship between
American Jews and Israel--the other dominant factor in Jewish American
identity--has recently been explored by writers such as Allegra Goodman and
Tova Reich.
Finally,
contemporary Jewish American fiction has become geographically diverse. Early
works were overwhelmingly urban, set in places such as Brooklyn, the Lower East
Side, and Newark. From Goodman's Hawaii, to Steve Stern's Memphis, to Robert
Cohen's New Mexico, the varied settings of contemporary Jewish American
literature reflect the geographical dispersion of Jewish Americans.