The essay starts with a brief introduction on Jewish Canadian writers, and especially on Jewish women poets and novelists, who have only recently found a proper critical attention. On the literary map of Jewish Canadian women writers, the Shoah occupies a specific space, as in the novel Fugitive Pieces by Anne Michaels, published in 1996. A poet and novelist, the Canadian writer revisits the Shoah through the voice of a male survivor, Jakob Beer, rescued by a geologist, working at the Biskupin site in Poland, who literally adopts him, taking him in incognito to Greece and, after World War II, to Canada. In the second part of the novel the narration switches to Ben, a professor of meteorology in contemporary Toronto. A child of survivors, Be...
After a brief discussion of Grete Weil’s liminal position in the context of Twentieth-Century German...
This article considers the reading effects of the mise en abyme in Anne Michaels's Fugitive Pieces t...
Amis has always found the question of the Holocaust’s exceptionalism fascinating and returns to the ...
The essay starts with a brief introduction on Jewish Canadian writers, and especially on Jewish wome...
The objective of this text is to analyse some works of Liana Millu and Edith Bruck within the frame ...
This work suggests a portrait of Edith Bruck: Hungarian Jewish woman surviving Nazi barbarity, Itali...
The great Jewish writer Aron Appelfeld was a survivor of the Shoah. He recounted the experience of c...
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ...
Sin dall'inizio del XXI secole le letterature ebraiche in USA e Canada hanno subito una graduale tra...
What status should be accorded to the “truth” of fiction with respect to the memory of the concentra...
In this issue, the section Open Field hosts a discussion focused on a short essay by Cynthia Ozick, ...
This essay focuses on “hunger”, the Leitmotif of Anzia Yezierska's literary production, a powerful m...
The article analyzes two recent successful novels by Ursula Krechel that return to the recent German...
The paper main theme is Esther in Purim parodies. As a study case, the Jewish community in Rome is t...
This essay discusses the role that books have had for the Jews living on the southern shore of the M...
After a brief discussion of Grete Weil’s liminal position in the context of Twentieth-Century German...
This article considers the reading effects of the mise en abyme in Anne Michaels's Fugitive Pieces t...
Amis has always found the question of the Holocaust’s exceptionalism fascinating and returns to the ...
The essay starts with a brief introduction on Jewish Canadian writers, and especially on Jewish wome...
The objective of this text is to analyse some works of Liana Millu and Edith Bruck within the frame ...
This work suggests a portrait of Edith Bruck: Hungarian Jewish woman surviving Nazi barbarity, Itali...
The great Jewish writer Aron Appelfeld was a survivor of the Shoah. He recounted the experience of c...
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000 Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ...
Sin dall'inizio del XXI secole le letterature ebraiche in USA e Canada hanno subito una graduale tra...
What status should be accorded to the “truth” of fiction with respect to the memory of the concentra...
In this issue, the section Open Field hosts a discussion focused on a short essay by Cynthia Ozick, ...
This essay focuses on “hunger”, the Leitmotif of Anzia Yezierska's literary production, a powerful m...
The article analyzes two recent successful novels by Ursula Krechel that return to the recent German...
The paper main theme is Esther in Purim parodies. As a study case, the Jewish community in Rome is t...
This essay discusses the role that books have had for the Jews living on the southern shore of the M...
After a brief discussion of Grete Weil’s liminal position in the context of Twentieth-Century German...
This article considers the reading effects of the mise en abyme in Anne Michaels's Fugitive Pieces t...
Amis has always found the question of the Holocaust’s exceptionalism fascinating and returns to the ...