Music plays a crucial role in the prose of Yehudit Hendel and Ruth Almog, two Israeli women writers who have been active since the second half of the twentieth century. This essay focuses on Dwarves on the Pajamas from Almog\u27s collection of stories Invisible Mending (1993) and A Tale of the Lost Violin from Hendel\u27s collection of stories The Empty Place (2007) and examines how the employment of acoustic images and musical intertexts creates subversive modes of representing a traumatic past. Moreover, scholars have pointed out the complex history of the reception of Almog and Hendel\u27s respective work and how critics neglected or dismissed the social, ethical, or political aspects of their literature. I refer to psychoanalytical ...
This article argues that Sansour's In Vitro, Saleem Haddad's short story "Song of the Birds," and Ad...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...
This thesis sets out to interpret Jonathan Safran Foer’s "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" and N...
Music plays a crucial role in the prose of Yehudit Hendel and Ruth Almog, two Israeli women writers ...
This dissertation examines a practice of private song-making, one whose existence is often denied, a...
and the lyricist-musical producer Ya’akov Gilad released the album Efer Veavak (in English: Ashes an...
This essay examines several Holocaust tales written by Shulamith Hareven, was one of Israel’s pre-em...
Scholars regularly point to musical activity in Theresienstadt as evidence of thriving Jewish cultur...
This article explores the relationship between music and Holocaust memory, particularly the extent t...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
Holocaust representations performed by male survivors such as Primo Levi or Elie Wiesel became the “...
I write as a non-Jew about the brief correspondence sent to my father, shortly after the Second Worl...
Both Godberg’s play and Hareven’s short story illustrate the failure of the Israeli to come to terms...
In this essay, I define a genre unique to Israeli literature, the genre of soldier’s experience, whi...
This dissertation examines post-Holocaust, Jewish American novelists who utilize messainism in their...
This article argues that Sansour's In Vitro, Saleem Haddad's short story "Song of the Birds," and Ad...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...
This thesis sets out to interpret Jonathan Safran Foer’s "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" and N...
Music plays a crucial role in the prose of Yehudit Hendel and Ruth Almog, two Israeli women writers ...
This dissertation examines a practice of private song-making, one whose existence is often denied, a...
and the lyricist-musical producer Ya’akov Gilad released the album Efer Veavak (in English: Ashes an...
This essay examines several Holocaust tales written by Shulamith Hareven, was one of Israel’s pre-em...
Scholars regularly point to musical activity in Theresienstadt as evidence of thriving Jewish cultur...
This article explores the relationship between music and Holocaust memory, particularly the extent t...
This article argues the significance of literature in bearing witness to trauma. It engages the theo...
Holocaust representations performed by male survivors such as Primo Levi or Elie Wiesel became the “...
I write as a non-Jew about the brief correspondence sent to my father, shortly after the Second Worl...
Both Godberg’s play and Hareven’s short story illustrate the failure of the Israeli to come to terms...
In this essay, I define a genre unique to Israeli literature, the genre of soldier’s experience, whi...
This dissertation examines post-Holocaust, Jewish American novelists who utilize messainism in their...
This article argues that Sansour's In Vitro, Saleem Haddad's short story "Song of the Birds," and Ad...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...
This thesis sets out to interpret Jonathan Safran Foer’s "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" and N...