Response to Ruth Gilbert, “Jewish Gender Studies and Contemporary Literary Criticism”
This paper offers a brief overview of several key developments in modern Hebrew Israeli literature, moments where the female voice, of authors, poets and literary characters, paves the way to different sensitivities and voices in a seemingly hegemonic and strongly-ideological literary corpus. It aim...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Melilah : Manchester journal of Jewish studies 2019-12, Vol.13 (1), p.26-29 |
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description | This paper offers a brief overview of several key developments in modern Hebrew Israeli literature, moments where the female voice, of authors, poets and literary characters, paves the way to different sensitivities and voices in a seemingly hegemonic and strongly-ideological literary corpus. It aims to show that just like in world literature, in Jewish literature and in literary criticism, the rise of feminist readings opened the way to a variety of alternative voices, identities and otherness. |
doi_str_mv | 10.31826/mjj-2019-130105 |
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subjects | Cultural studies Culture Ethnic studies Females Feminism Fiction Gender studies Israeli literature Jewish literature Jewish people LGBTQ studies Michael, Sami Novels Otherness Poetry Postcolonialism Tammuz, Benjamin Womens literature Womens studies Zionism |
title | Response to Ruth Gilbert, “Jewish Gender Studies and Contemporary Literary Criticism” |
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