This essay examines the significance of A.M. Klein’s journalism to his career and his personal life, with a special emphasis on the serialized “Notebook of a Journey” (1949) that he published as an editorial-travelogue in the Canadian Jewish Chronicle. Building on the work of Klein scholars and editors, I argue that his journalism best epitomizes the central tension between his public persona as a Zionist and his private struggle with early Israeli nationalism’s incompatibility with his diasporic Jewish Canadian identity. “Notebook” is characterized by an intense spiritual and ethical engagement with the plight of the Jewish diaspora and the question of Israel as a redemptive homeland. As a Zionist, Klein identifies Israel as a “home” or sp...
The unity of Cohen\u27s novels is due to their common theme of Jewish destiny. This is traced in the...
My essay discusses a new attempt in young Israeli novels to break out of the suffocation and stagnat...
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ...
Zionism was part of A.M. Klein's heritage, and as early as 1928-30 Klein was writing poems about Jew...
\u201cBen-Ami\u2019s Swiss Experience: Narrative and the Zionist Dream\u201d in: East European Jews...
This dissertation explores the experience of diaspora and traces how it appears, changes, and operat...
According to Marianne Hirsch, descendants of exiled Holocaust survivors unwillingly inherit their pa...
Israel has many meanings that are crucial to the analysis and interpretation of any resolution of th...
This article explores a question that is often assumed but rarely addressed: What does Israel provid...
From the memoirs of several Jewish homesteaders in North Dakota, one observes a series of binaries b...
In October of 1941, twenty-nine rabbis and rabbinical students left Shanghai and eventually arrived ...
This dissertation focuses on the figure of Jewish exile since the rise of Zionism. My research propo...
This dissertation examines post-Holocaust, Jewish American novelists who utilize messainism in their...
This article discusses the work of the Prague Jewish writer H. G. (Hans Günther) Adler (1910–1988) a...
Ahad Ha'am (Asher Ginsberg, 1856-1927) was an influential Zionist leader and publicist. This thesis ...
The unity of Cohen\u27s novels is due to their common theme of Jewish destiny. This is traced in the...
My essay discusses a new attempt in young Israeli novels to break out of the suffocation and stagnat...
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ...
Zionism was part of A.M. Klein's heritage, and as early as 1928-30 Klein was writing poems about Jew...
\u201cBen-Ami\u2019s Swiss Experience: Narrative and the Zionist Dream\u201d in: East European Jews...
This dissertation explores the experience of diaspora and traces how it appears, changes, and operat...
According to Marianne Hirsch, descendants of exiled Holocaust survivors unwillingly inherit their pa...
Israel has many meanings that are crucial to the analysis and interpretation of any resolution of th...
This article explores a question that is often assumed but rarely addressed: What does Israel provid...
From the memoirs of several Jewish homesteaders in North Dakota, one observes a series of binaries b...
In October of 1941, twenty-nine rabbis and rabbinical students left Shanghai and eventually arrived ...
This dissertation focuses on the figure of Jewish exile since the rise of Zionism. My research propo...
This dissertation examines post-Holocaust, Jewish American novelists who utilize messainism in their...
This article discusses the work of the Prague Jewish writer H. G. (Hans Günther) Adler (1910–1988) a...
Ahad Ha'am (Asher Ginsberg, 1856-1927) was an influential Zionist leader and publicist. This thesis ...
The unity of Cohen\u27s novels is due to their common theme of Jewish destiny. This is traced in the...
My essay discusses a new attempt in young Israeli novels to break out of the suffocation and stagnat...
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ...