No Place in Time

About The Book

<p><i>No Place in Time: The Hebraic Myth in Late-Nineteenth-Century American Literature</i> examines how the Hebraic myth in which Jewishness became a metaphor for an ancient pre-Christian past was reimagined in nineteenth-century American realism. The Hebraic myth while integral to a Protestant understanding of time was incapable of addressing modern Jewishness especially in the context of the growing social and national concern around the Jewish problem. Sharon B. Oster shows how realist authors consequently cast Jews as caught between a distant past and a promising American future. In either case whether creating or disrupting temporal continuity Jewishness existed outside of time. <p/><i>No Place in Time</i> complicates the debates over Eastern European immigration in the 1880s and questions of assimilation to a Protestant American culture. The first chapter begins in the world of periodicals an interconnected literary culture out of which Abraham Cahan emerged as a literary voice of Jewish immigrants caught between nostalgia and a messianic future outside of linear progression. Moving from the margins to the center of literary realism the second chapter revolves around Henry James's modernization of the noble Hebrew as a figure of mediation and reconciliation. The third chapter extends this analysis into the naturalism of Edith Wharton who takes up questions of intimacy and intermarriage and places the Jew at the nexus of competing futures shaped by uncertainty and risk. A number of Jewish female perspectives are included in the fourth chapter that recasts plots of cultural assimilation through intermarriage in terms of time: if a Jewish past exists in tension with an American future these writers recuperate the Hebraic myth for themselves to imagine a viable Jewish future. <i>No Place in Time</i> ends with a brief look at poet Emma Lazarus whose understanding of Jewishness was distinctly modern not nostalgic mythical or dead. <p/><i>No Place in Time</i> highlights a significant shift in how Jewishness was represented in American literature and as such raises questions of identity immigration and religion. This volume will be of interest to scholars of nineteenth- and turn-of-the-century American literature American Jewish literature and literature as it intersects with immigration religion or temporality as well as anyone interested in Jewish studies.</p>
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