Born Hutterite: stories by Samuel Hofer

Acts of Concealment, the proceedings of a conference on Mennonite writing held a t the University of Waterloo in May 1990, brings together ten critical essays, an intr oduction and a transcription of the closing panel's remarks, poetry by Sarah Klassen, David Wal ter - Toews, Di Brandt, and Pat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian Ethnic Studies 1993, Vol.25 (1), p.133
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description Acts of Concealment, the proceedings of a conference on Mennonite writing held a t the University of Waterloo in May 1990, brings together ten critical essays, an intr oduction and a transcription of the closing panel's remarks, poetry by Sarah Klassen, David Wal ter - Toews, Di Brandt, and Patrick Friesen, and prose fiction by David Walter - Toews and Sa ra Stambaugh. The combination of critical and "creative" writing in one volume reflects the pr ogram of the conference and follows the pattern of Harvest: Anthology of Mennonite Writing in Canada (1974), Mennonite Images (1980), and Visions and Reality (1985). Read within the context of those other works on Mennonite writing, the poetry and prose fiction in Acts of Concealment mark a change in the writing anthologized: with the exception of Sarah Klassen's poems and David Walter - Toews "Fear of Landing," the subject matter is not readily identi fiable as Mennonite. That is not to say that an "insider" could not read the Mennonite mat ter into these writers' works, but whether the writers simultaneously conceal and reveal their Mennonite identity or whether they have done with what Rudy Wiebe calls "navel - gazing" a nd are getting on with being writers remains debatable, as the critical essays in the collectio n show. The first three papers, Al Reimer's on Arnold Dyck, Victor G. Goerksen's on the father image in Mennonite poetry, and Harry Loewen's on Gerhard Loewen, might be read as desc ribing the contributions of a Mennonite "canon's" forefathers. Reimer identifies Dyck's two main contributions to Mennonite writing as: 1) depicting "Mennonite experience from a fully integrated ethno - secular perspective rather than from a church - oriented dida ctic perspective"(33); and 2) exploiting "the rhetoric of Low German plain style and the levels of irony it offers"(34). Doerksen sees "continuity reflected in the image of the fa ther in Mennonite poetry"(39), primarily in the "traditional metaphysical father image"(45) of God /father. Harry Loewen situates Gerhard Loewen's poetry in the context of Mennonite writers who began publishing in Russia in the late nineteenth century and continued in Canada afte r the Russian revolution, but notes Loewen's difference in being "among the first Mennonites t o break with the purely devotional - religious verse - making and to turn instead to German c lassical and romantic models"(58). Essays by Magdalene Redekop, Andrew Stubbs, and Wayne Tefs focus on cultural con cern
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The combination of critical and "creative" writing in one volume reflects the pr ogram of the conference and follows the pattern of Harvest: Anthology of Mennonite Writing in Canada (1974), Mennonite Images (1980), and Visions and Reality (1985). Read within the context of those other works on Mennonite writing, the poetry and prose fiction in Acts of Concealment mark a change in the writing anthologized: with the exception of Sarah Klassen's poems and David Walter - Toews "Fear of Landing," the subject matter is not readily identi fiable as Mennonite. That is not to say that an "insider" could not read the Mennonite mat ter into these writers' works, but whether the writers simultaneously conceal and reveal their Mennonite identity or whether they have done with what Rudy Wiebe calls "navel - gazing" a nd are getting on with being writers remains debatable, as the critical essays in the collectio n show. The first three papers, Al Reimer's on Arnold Dyck, Victor G. Goerksen's on the father image in Mennonite poetry, and Harry Loewen's on Gerhard Loewen, might be read as desc ribing the contributions of a Mennonite "canon's" forefathers. Reimer identifies Dyck's two main contributions to Mennonite writing as: 1) depicting "Mennonite experience from a fully integrated ethno - secular perspective rather than from a church - oriented dida ctic perspective"(33); and 2) exploiting "the rhetoric of Low German plain style and the levels of irony it offers"(34). Doerksen sees "continuity reflected in the image of the fa ther in Mennonite poetry"(39), primarily in the "traditional metaphysical father image"(45) of God /father. Harry Loewen situates Gerhard Loewen's poetry in the context of Mennonite writers who began publishing in Russia in the late nineteenth century and continued in Canada afte r the Russian revolution, but notes Loewen's difference in being "among the first Mennonites t o break with the purely devotional - religious verse - making and to turn instead to German c lassical and romantic models"(58). Essays by Magdalene Redekop, Andrew Stubbs, and Wayne Tefs focus on cultural con cerns. As she wittily and playfully dismantles the stereotypical ideas of Mennonite mot hers as Earth Mothers, as praying mothers, as women defined by their womb, Redekop focuses on the details of The Diary of Anna Baerg: 1916 - 1924 andPeter Epp's Eine Mutter, noting the ways male editors have made these women into exemplars of the faith. For Redekop, literary quality alone does not determine her response to the work, as she writes of Anna Baerg: "she m oves me deeply, this woman, even though her poetry is not particularly good" (114). But a good literary work such as Armin Wiebe's The Salvation of Yasch Siemens can carnivalize the co nventional. For me, at least, Andrew Stubb's essay on Sandra Birdsell's fiction too much emp hasizes the "as literary theory" or "reading as," although it invites further consideration of the "literal" in Birdsell"s fiction. In contrast, Wayne Tefs succinctly demonstrates images of vi olence and rage in poems by Victor Enns, Patrick Friesen, and Di Brandt. His explanation of that rage is plausible: he sees it as occasioned by disillusionment with the Mennonite commun ity of faith, by that community's inability to deal with adolescent questioning. 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Goerksen's on the father image in Mennonite poetry, and Harry Loewen's on Gerhard Loewen, might be read as desc ribing the contributions of a Mennonite "canon's" forefathers. Reimer identifies Dyck's two main contributions to Mennonite writing as: 1) depicting "Mennonite experience from a fully integrated ethno - secular perspective rather than from a church - oriented dida ctic perspective"(33); and 2) exploiting "the rhetoric of Low German plain style and the levels of irony it offers"(34). Doerksen sees "continuity reflected in the image of the fa ther in Mennonite poetry"(39), primarily in the "traditional metaphysical father image"(45) of God /father. Harry Loewen situates Gerhard Loewen's poetry in the context of Mennonite writers who began publishing in Russia in the late nineteenth century and continued in Canada afte r the Russian revolution, but notes Loewen's difference in being "among the first Mennonites t o break with the purely devotional - religious verse - making and to turn instead to German c lassical and romantic models"(58). Essays by Magdalene Redekop, Andrew Stubbs, and Wayne Tefs focus on cultural con cerns. As she wittily and playfully dismantles the stereotypical ideas of Mennonite mot hers as Earth Mothers, as praying mothers, as women defined by their womb, Redekop focuses on the details of The Diary of Anna Baerg: 1916 - 1924 andPeter Epp's Eine Mutter, noting the ways male editors have made these women into exemplars of the faith. 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The combination of critical and "creative" writing in one volume reflects the pr ogram of the conference and follows the pattern of Harvest: Anthology of Mennonite Writing in Canada (1974), Mennonite Images (1980), and Visions and Reality (1985). Read within the context of those other works on Mennonite writing, the poetry and prose fiction in Acts of Concealment mark a change in the writing anthologized: with the exception of Sarah Klassen's poems and David Walter - Toews "Fear of Landing," the subject matter is not readily identi fiable as Mennonite. That is not to say that an "insider" could not read the Mennonite mat ter into these writers' works, but whether the writers simultaneously conceal and reveal their Mennonite identity or whether they have done with what Rudy Wiebe calls "navel - gazing" a nd are getting on with being writers remains debatable, as the critical essays in the collectio n show. The first three papers, Al Reimer's on Arnold Dyck, Victor G. Goerksen's on the father image in Mennonite poetry, and Harry Loewen's on Gerhard Loewen, might be read as desc ribing the contributions of a Mennonite "canon's" forefathers. Reimer identifies Dyck's two main contributions to Mennonite writing as: 1) depicting "Mennonite experience from a fully integrated ethno - secular perspective rather than from a church - oriented dida ctic perspective"(33); and 2) exploiting "the rhetoric of Low German plain style and the levels of irony it offers"(34). Doerksen sees "continuity reflected in the image of the fa ther in Mennonite poetry"(39), primarily in the "traditional metaphysical father image"(45) of God /father. Harry Loewen situates Gerhard Loewen's poetry in the context of Mennonite writers who began publishing in Russia in the late nineteenth century and continued in Canada afte r the Russian revolution, but notes Loewen's difference in being "among the first Mennonites t o break with the purely devotional - religious verse - making and to turn instead to German c lassical and romantic models"(58). Essays by Magdalene Redekop, Andrew Stubbs, and Wayne Tefs focus on cultural con cerns. As she wittily and playfully dismantles the stereotypical ideas of Mennonite mot hers as Earth Mothers, as praying mothers, as women defined by their womb, Redekop focuses on the details of The Diary of Anna Baerg: 1916 - 1924 andPeter Epp's Eine Mutter, noting the ways male editors have made these women into exemplars of the faith. For Redekop, literary quality alone does not determine her response to the work, as she writes of Anna Baerg: "she m oves me deeply, this woman, even though her poetry is not particularly good" (114). But a good literary work such as Armin Wiebe's The Salvation of Yasch Siemens can carnivalize the co nventional. For me, at least, Andrew Stubb's essay on Sandra Birdsell's fiction too much emp hasizes the "as literary theory" or "reading as," although it invites further consideration of the "literal" in Birdsell"s fiction. In contrast, Wayne Tefs succinctly demonstrates images of vi olence and rage in poems by Victor Enns, Patrick Friesen, and Di Brandt. His explanation of that rage is plausible: he sees it as occasioned by disillusionment with the Mennonite commun ity of faith, by that community's inability to deal with adolescent questioning. Without doubt Mennonite writing has become part of the literary postmodern, but it seems unable to join a postmodern literary sensibility with its traditional Mennonite Christianity except in oppos ition.</abstract><cop>Calgary</cop><pub>Canadian Ethnic Studies Journal</pub></addata></record>
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source Sociological Abstracts; Political Science Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects 19th century
Adolescents
Brandt, Diana
Christianity
Collective Settlements
Community Relations
Conferences (Gatherings)
Context
Creativity
Cultural identity
Essays
Extended projection principle
Fathers
Feminism
Fiction
German language
God (Judeo-Christian)
Hutterites
Irony
Language history
Language Usage
Literary theory
Mennonites
Mothers
Parents & parenting
Poetry
Postmodernism
Prose
Reality
Rhetoric
Russian language
Russian Revolution
Short stories
Stereotypes
Transcription
West Germanic languages
Women
Writers
Writing
title Born Hutterite: stories by Samuel Hofer
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