Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930

While the assimilationist novelists Abraham Cahan and Anzia Yezierska are usually considered to be part of a separate literary and political tradition to the communist writer and polemicist Michael Gold, their most enduring novels document the Jewish-American experience through the same thematic pri...

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Main Author: Harrison, Andrew
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76778/
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author Harrison, Andrew
author_facet Harrison, Andrew
author_sort Harrison, Andrew
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description While the assimilationist novelists Abraham Cahan and Anzia Yezierska are usually considered to be part of a separate literary and political tradition to the communist writer and polemicist Michael Gold, their most enduring novels document the Jewish-American experience through the same thematic prisms: the conflict between Judaic and American gender norms, the quest of younger Jews to receive a fulfilling American education, and the fragile dynamics of the Lower East Side immigrant family. Considering Cahan’s The Rise of David Levinsky (1915), Yezierska’s Bread Givers (1925) and Gold’s Jews Without Money (1930) as complementary character portraits of vulnerable men and radical women counteracts the tendency to place them in competing streams of masculine and feminine fiction. Moreover, while scholars typically associate Gold with the 1930s proletarian tradition (thanks to his radical theories of cultural production), framing him as a canonical Jewish writer of the pre-Depression era reveals a consistent aesthetic thread between the bourgeois Bildungsroman and the radical proletarian novel. Treating these writers on a continuum with one another thus cements Gold’s reputation as a pioneering literary figure, and contributes to recent scholarship treating Cahan and Yezierska’s novels as more than just objects of historical nostalgia.
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spelling nottingham-767782024-01-30T15:49:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76778/ Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930 Harrison, Andrew While the assimilationist novelists Abraham Cahan and Anzia Yezierska are usually considered to be part of a separate literary and political tradition to the communist writer and polemicist Michael Gold, their most enduring novels document the Jewish-American experience through the same thematic prisms: the conflict between Judaic and American gender norms, the quest of younger Jews to receive a fulfilling American education, and the fragile dynamics of the Lower East Side immigrant family. Considering Cahan’s The Rise of David Levinsky (1915), Yezierska’s Bread Givers (1925) and Gold’s Jews Without Money (1930) as complementary character portraits of vulnerable men and radical women counteracts the tendency to place them in competing streams of masculine and feminine fiction. Moreover, while scholars typically associate Gold with the 1930s proletarian tradition (thanks to his radical theories of cultural production), framing him as a canonical Jewish writer of the pre-Depression era reveals a consistent aesthetic thread between the bourgeois Bildungsroman and the radical proletarian novel. Treating these writers on a continuum with one another thus cements Gold’s reputation as a pioneering literary figure, and contributes to recent scholarship treating Cahan and Yezierska’s novels as more than just objects of historical nostalgia. 2023-12-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76778/1/PDF%20MRES%20THESIS%20FINAL.pdf Harrison, Andrew (2023) Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Jewish-American Fiction; Abraham Cahan; Anzia Yezierska; Michael Gold; Lower East Side; gender in literature; education in literature; family in literature; Bildungsroman; proletarian novel
spellingShingle Jewish-American Fiction; Abraham Cahan; Anzia Yezierska; Michael Gold; Lower East Side; gender in literature; education in literature; family in literature; Bildungsroman; proletarian novel
Harrison, Andrew
Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title_full Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title_fullStr Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title_full_unstemmed Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title_short Gender, education and family dynamics in Jewish-American fiction: 1915-1930
title_sort gender, education and family dynamics in jewish-american fiction: 1915-1930
topic Jewish-American Fiction; Abraham Cahan; Anzia Yezierska; Michael Gold; Lower East Side; gender in literature; education in literature; family in literature; Bildungsroman; proletarian novel
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76778/