Free shipping on orders over $99
The Schlemiel as Metaphor

The Schlemiel as Metaphor

Studies in Yiddish and American Jewish Fiction

by Sanford Pinsker
Hardback
Publication Date: 27/12/1991

Share This Book:

 
$67.95
The certainty that deep down we are all schlemiels is perhaps what makes America love an inept ball team or a Woody Allen who unburdens his neurotic heart in public.

In this unique, revised history of the schlemiel, Sanford Pinsker uses psychological, linguistic, and anecdotal approaches, as well as his considerable skills as a spritely storyteller, to trace the schlemiel from his beginnings in the Old Testament through his appearance in the nineteenth-century literature of Mendele Mocher Seforim and Sholom Aleichem to his final development as the beautiful loser in the works of Isaac Bashevis Singer, Bernard Malamud, Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, and Woody Allen. Horatio Alger might have once been a good emblem of the American sensibility, but today Woody Allen's anxious, bespectacled punin (face) seems closer, and truer, to our national experience. His urban, end-of-the-century anxieties mirror--albeit in exaggeration--our own.

This expanded study of the schlemiel is especially relevant now, when scholarship of Yiddish and American Jewish literature is on the increase. By sketching the family tree of that durable anti-hero the schlemiel, Pinsker proves that Jewish humor is built upon the very foundations of the Jewish experience. Pinsker shows the evolution of the schlemiel from the comic butt of Yiddish jokes to a literary figure that speaks to the heart of our modern problems, and he demonstrates the way that Yiddish humor provides a sorely needed correction, a way of pulling down the vanities we all live by.
ISBN:
9780809315819
9780809315819
Category:
Literary studies: general
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
27-12-1991
Language:
English
Publisher:
Southern Illinois University Press
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
198
Dimensions (mm):
222x146x23mm
Weight:
0.45kg

Click 'Notify Me' to get an email alert when this item becomes available

Reviews

Be the first to review The Schlemiel as Metaphor.