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History Jewish

Reconstructing the Old Country

American Jewry in the Post-Holocaust Decades

contributions by Eliyana R. Adler, Sheila E. Jelen, Hasia Diner, Eli Lederhendler, David Slucki, Markus Krah, Gennady Estraikh, Ellen Kellman, Holli Levitsky, Samantha Baskind, Gil Ribak, Rachel Deblinger, Ann Komaromi, David Jünger & Rachel Rothstein

Publisher
Wayne State University Press
Initial publish date
Nov 2017
Category
Jewish, Holocaust, Jewish
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780814344378
    Publish Date
    Nov 2017
    List Price
    $77.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780814341667
    Publish Date
    Nov 2017
    List Price
    $45.95

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Description

The 1950s and early 1960s have not traditionally been viewed as a particularly creative era in American Jewish life. On the contrary, these years have been painted as a period of inactivity and Americanization. As if exhausted by the traumas of World War II, the American Jewish community took a rest until suddenly reawakened by the 1967 Six-Day War and its implications for world Jewry. Recent scholarship, however, has demonstrated that previous assumptions about the early silence of American Jewry with regard to the Holocaust were exaggerated. And while historians have expanded their borders and definitions to encompass the postwar decades, scholars from other disciplines have been paying increasing attention to the unique literary, photographic, artistic, dramatic, political, and other cultural creations of this period and the ways in which they hearken back to not only the Holocaust itself but also to images of prewar Eastern Europe.

Reconstructing the Old Country: American Jewry in the Post-Holocaust Decades brings together scholars of literature, art, history, ethnography, and related fields to examine how the American Jewish community in the post-Holocaust era was shaped by its encounter with literary relics, living refugees, and other cultural productions which grew out of an encounter with Eastern European Jewish life from the pre-Holocaust era. In particular, editors Eliyana R. Adler and Sheila E. Jelen are interested in three different narratives and their occasional intersections. The first narrative is the real, hands-on interaction between American Jews and European Jewish refugees and how the two groups influenced one another. Second were the imaginative reconstructions of a wartime or prewar Jewish world to meet the needs of a postwar American Jewish audience. Third is the narrative in which the Holocaust was mobilized to justify postwar political and philanthropic activism.

Reconstructing the Old Country will contribute to the growing scholarly conversation about the postwar years in a variety of fields. Scholars and students of American Jewish history and literature in particular will appreciate this internationally focused scholarship on the continuing reverberations of the Second World War and the Holocaust.

About the authors

Editorial Reviews

"Adler and Jelen have edited an engaging volume that scholars in many fields will find useful. More significantly, they have offered us an excellent model of collaborative work and, not least, have shown us what the old country signified for postwar American Jews."?Sean Martin, Studies in Contemporary Jewry

"Reconstructing the Old Country, a collection of essays written by historians, literary critics, and ethnographers, provides an extraordinarily interesting and nuanced analysis of how American Jews encountered Holocaust survivors and imagined the East European Jewish past in the years after World War II. Revealing the significant extent to which American Jews did indeed engage with the the tragedy of the Holocaust, came to terms with Holocaust survivors, and reimagined the now-dead Eastern European Jewish world, editors Eliyana Adler and Sheila Jelen have made an extremely important contribution to the scholarship on American Jewish history and literature in this period and demonstrated the fruitful results of interdisciplinary engagement."?Marsha Rozenblit, Harvey M. Meyerhoff Professor of Modern Jewish History, University of Maryland

"This path-breaking and moving volume examines how American Jewry, now the largest Jewish community in the world, reacted in the postwar years to the decimation of East European Jewry in the Holocaust. It investigates how American Jews absorbed the influx of East European survivors, commemorated the destruction of what had been for many centuries one of the main centers of Jewish life, and sought to intervene to defend the still-existing Jewish communities in the area. It is essential reading for all students of modern Jewish history and of the postwar world."?Antony Polonsky, Emeritus Professor of Holocaust Studies, Brandeis University and Chief Historian at the Museum of Polish Jews in Warsaw