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Opinion

Ignore the naysayers, we’re living in a golden age of Jewish writing

Modern diaspora fiction is going through a period of growth and Israeli fiction is booming

October 20, 2022 13:29
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3 min read

In his column last week, Josh Glancy was absolutely right to praise Joseph Roth, one of the great Jewish writers of the 20th century, and to speak of “the wave of Jewish genius and creativity that emerged from the Enlightenment and Emancipation” (The Jewish diaspora is going through an age of mediocrity, 14 October). Glancy singles out Joseph Roth but he could have added many others: Soviet writers like Isaac Babel and Vasily Grossman, central Europeans like Kafka, Stefan Zweig and Bruno Schulz, the first great Jewish-American writers, such as Henry Roth and Nathanael West.

Glancy then asks two fascinating questions: “Where did that energy come from? And do we still have it?” I agree with his answer to the first question, the creative tensions between being an outsider and an insider, “Leaving the ghetto [or the shtetl] but never washing off the smell of onions.”

So many of these great writers, and the following generation, came from the periphery of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, Ukraine or, like Henry Roth, were immigrants to America. This tension between being a Jewish outsider and aspiring to be an insider in a new world helped create this explosion of literary Jewish creativity in the first half of the 20th century. Take Babel’s Red Cavalry, the opening pages of Henry Roth’s Call It Sleep or Kafka’s Metamorphosis. They are all about the tensions and challenges of being Jewish in the modern world.

What about Glancy’s second question ,though: Do we still have that creativity? He is surprisingly negative about contemporary Jewish writing and here I disagree strongly. There are two problems. First, he only cites Jonathan Safran Foer’s weakest novel, Here I Am. Second, one of the obvious counter-examples, as Glancy acknowledges, is modern Israeli writing, but it only receives one short paragraph at the end.

Topics:

Literature