Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s

In the 1980s there was a transformation in the way Jews, and Jewishness, were expressed in American films as a function of the increasing popular acceptance of a form of multiculturalism that celebrates ethno-racial difference and of the identity politics that is its corollary. In this article I wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stratton, Jon
Format: Journal Article
Published: OUP 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://screen.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/citation/42/2/142
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37913
_version_ 1848755177778053120
author Stratton, Jon
author_facet Stratton, Jon
author_sort Stratton, Jon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In the 1980s there was a transformation in the way Jews, and Jewishness, were expressed in American films as a function of the increasing popular acceptance of a form of multiculturalism that celebrates ethno-racial difference and of the identity politics that is its corollary. In this article I will begin by thinking through how films of the 1950s and 1960s discursively reproduced Jews as assimilated into white America. I will then take three films that, in diverse ways, articulate aspects of the transformation. I will examine Yentl and Zelig from 1983, and Desperately Seeking Susan from 1985. All these films, as we shall see, express the shift I am describing ambiguously. All three films were, in different ways, marginal to the mainstream Hollywood project and all three are by Jewish directors, two by women. Yentl, produced and directed by Barbra Streisand, who also starred in it, was the realisation of a long-term personal dream made possible only after she agreed to make the film as a musical. Zelig, a Woody Allen film, was made in black and white as a pseudo-documentary and Desperately Seeking Susan, the first film for director Susan Seidelman, started out as a low-budget, independent production.These, and later films, begin to address the problem of representing Jews, and Jewishness, in the context of a socio-political move in the United States away from the forms of identification located in the ideology of cultural pluralism and towards those of multiculturalism. As we shall see, there has been a tendency to understand this development using the distinction made by Werner Sollors between thinking in terms of descent and consent. I will argue that, as a general rule, the American nation tends to think in terms of consent while racial and ethnic groups have tended to think of themselves in terms of descent. This is as true for American multiculturalism as for cultural pluralism. However, as Jews began to distinguish themselves from white America, they have tended to do this in the consensual terms that were central to their being accepted as white. Key to this has been the trope of the double and the idea of performativity. This emphasis on 'consent', in the broadest sense, on, I would say, Jewishness as a cultural effect, operates in tandem with the religious, Judaic, use of the halachic definition of a Jew, based on matrilineal descent, which is that for a person to be a Jew their mother has to be a Jew. Consent signals the preoccupation of that paradox, the secular Jew.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:52:10Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-37913
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:52:10Z
publishDate 2001
publisher OUP
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-379132017-10-02T02:27:09Z Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s Stratton, Jon Cultural pluralism Multiculturalism Jewishness identity politics Assimilation Hollywood American films Jews In the 1980s there was a transformation in the way Jews, and Jewishness, were expressed in American films as a function of the increasing popular acceptance of a form of multiculturalism that celebrates ethno-racial difference and of the identity politics that is its corollary. In this article I will begin by thinking through how films of the 1950s and 1960s discursively reproduced Jews as assimilated into white America. I will then take three films that, in diverse ways, articulate aspects of the transformation. I will examine Yentl and Zelig from 1983, and Desperately Seeking Susan from 1985. All these films, as we shall see, express the shift I am describing ambiguously. All three films were, in different ways, marginal to the mainstream Hollywood project and all three are by Jewish directors, two by women. Yentl, produced and directed by Barbra Streisand, who also starred in it, was the realisation of a long-term personal dream made possible only after she agreed to make the film as a musical. Zelig, a Woody Allen film, was made in black and white as a pseudo-documentary and Desperately Seeking Susan, the first film for director Susan Seidelman, started out as a low-budget, independent production.These, and later films, begin to address the problem of representing Jews, and Jewishness, in the context of a socio-political move in the United States away from the forms of identification located in the ideology of cultural pluralism and towards those of multiculturalism. As we shall see, there has been a tendency to understand this development using the distinction made by Werner Sollors between thinking in terms of descent and consent. I will argue that, as a general rule, the American nation tends to think in terms of consent while racial and ethnic groups have tended to think of themselves in terms of descent. This is as true for American multiculturalism as for cultural pluralism. However, as Jews began to distinguish themselves from white America, they have tended to do this in the consensual terms that were central to their being accepted as white. Key to this has been the trope of the double and the idea of performativity. This emphasis on 'consent', in the broadest sense, on, I would say, Jewishness as a cultural effect, operates in tandem with the religious, Judaic, use of the halachic definition of a Jew, based on matrilineal descent, which is that for a person to be a Jew their mother has to be a Jew. Consent signals the preoccupation of that paradox, the secular Jew. 2001 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37913 http://screen.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/citation/42/2/142 OUP fulltext
spellingShingle Cultural pluralism
Multiculturalism
Jewishness
identity politics
Assimilation
Hollywood
American films
Jews
Stratton, Jon
Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title_full Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title_fullStr Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title_full_unstemmed Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title_short Not really white--again: performing Jewish difference in Hollywood films since the 1980s
title_sort not really white--again: performing jewish difference in hollywood films since the 1980s
topic Cultural pluralism
Multiculturalism
Jewishness
identity politics
Assimilation
Hollywood
American films
Jews
url http://screen.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/citation/42/2/142
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/37913