
Elaborate analogies between Irish and Jewish history, between Irish and Jewish subjectivities, occur with surprising frequency throughout American literature. They recall James Joyce's Leopold Bloom and episodes of Ulysses, Douglas Hyde's analogies during the Celtic Revival between learning Hebrew and learning Irish, and a myriad of claims of an unusual relationship between these peoples that goes beyond comparisons of their respective diasporic histories. But how does one describe this uncanny relationship, one often marked by hostility, affinity, and ambivalence, without essentializing people whose origins, class affiliation, educations, life experiences, and so on are enormously different?"Something Dreadful and Grand": American Literature and the Irish-Jewish Unconscious describes a complex allosemitism and allohibernianism through a variety of cultural texts with which immigrant Irish and Jewish Americans were most engaged: popular music of the Tin Pan Alley era, tenement literature from Anzia Yezierska and James T. Farrell through the posthumous publication of Henry Roth's An American Type, and proletarian and socialist-inflected drama by Elmer Rice, Clifford Odets, Eugene O'Neill, and Arthur Miller as they engaged the Irish drama of such writers as Bernard Shaw and Sean O'Casey. In an effort to trace both the genealogy and more recent trajectory of immigrant drama and fiction, chapters explore both the post-Famine melodramatic stage of the nineteenth century and a host of more contemporary texts from newer generations of immigrants. Throughout, the book argues for a "circum-North Atlantic" culture in which texts from Ireland, Britain, Irish America, and Jewish America contribute substantially to both a modern American literature and to understandings of the terms "Irish" and "Jewish." How can we really know what these terms mean as they delimit or erase totally the differences inherent to them? Borrowing a term from psychoanalytic and political theory, "Someth
This book investigates the complex, often contradictory relationship between Irish and Jewish identities within the context of American literature and cultural history. Stephen Watt, a scholar of modern drama and literature, utilizes psychoanalytic theory and historical analysis to examine how these two diasporic groups have navigated affinity, hostility, and ambivalence. He argues that a 'circum-North Atlantic' cultural framework is necessary to understand how these groups shaped modern American identity and literature.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the fields of ethnic studies and American literature identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of comparative diasporic identities. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the sophisticated application of psychoanalytic theory to cultural texts.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-07-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190227958
ISBN-13:
9780190227951
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