<p>Haunted in the New World is a superb insightful and acutely intelligent piece of work. It makes a real contribution to the understanding of ethnicity in general and Jewish American culture in particular. --Morris Dickstein<br /><br />In 1916 Abraham Cahan editor of the Jewish daily The Forward warned his Yiddish-speaking readers of the potential psychic dangers associated with their New World situation. You will not be able to erase the old home from your heart he cautioned his immigrant readers transplanted from the shtetls and cities of Eastern Europe to exhilarating if bewildering multicultural New York. Building on Cahan's deeply personal reflection Haunted in the New World maps the affective landscape of modern Jewish American culture.<br /><br />Drawing on scholarship in a range of disciplines including the sociology of manners the study of the role of foodways in the formation of ethnic identity the psychoanalysis of shame and self-hatred and the role of memory for those unsettled by the experience of migration Donald Weber traces the impact of the tension between nostalgia for the world left behind and the desire to blend into American culture as evidenced in a number of key texts in the canon of Jewish American expression. These range from early immigrant fiction and cinema through the novels of Anzia Yezierska and Henry Roth to Hollywood's representation of Jews in The Jazz Singer and Gentleman's Agreement to Saul Bellow Gertrude Berg (Molly Goldberg) and the comedians Milton Berle and Mickey Katz. Setting an array of figures and works in creative dialogue Haunted in the New World offers a genealogy of those core emotions--shame and self-hatred nostalgic longing and the impulse to forget--that organized much of 20th-century Jewish American expressive culture and transformed American culture at the same time.</p>
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