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Visiting Scribe
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February 21st JBC/Jewcy Twitter Book Club |  | |
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Weekly Book Recommendations
Updates from The ProsenPeople and JBC news
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Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition
David Nirenberg
W. W. Norton & Company, 2013. 624 pp. $35.00
This incisive history upends the complacency that confines anti-Judaism to the ideological extremes in the Western tradition.
David Nirenberg shows how foundational anti-Judaism is to the history of the West. Questions of how we are Jewish and, more critically, how and why we are not have been churning within the Western imagination throughout its history. Ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans; Christians and Muslims of every period; even the secularists of modernity have used Judaism in constructing their visions of the world. The thrust of this tradition construes Judaism as an opposition, a danger often from within, to be criticized, attacked, and eliminated. The intersections of these ideas with the world of power--the Roman destruction of the Second Temple, the Spanish Inquisition, the German Holocaust--are well known. The ways of thought underlying these tragedies can be found at the very foundation of Western history.
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An Armenian Sketchbook
Vasily Grossman; Robert and Elizabeth Chandler, trans.; Robert Chandler and Yury Bit-Yunan, intro.
NYRB Classics, 2013. 160 pp. $14.95
Few writers had to confront as many of the last century's mass tragedies as Vasily Grossman, who wrote with terrifying clarity about the Shoah, the Battle of Stalingrad, and the Terror Famine in the Ukraine.
An Armenian Sketchbook, however, shows us a very different Grossman, notable for his tenderness, warmth, and sense of fun. After the Soviet government confiscated--or, as Grossman always put it, "arrested"--Life and Fate, he took on the task of revising a literal Russian translation of a long Armenian novel. The novel was of little interest to him, but he needed money and was evidently glad of an excuse to travel to Armenia. An Armenian Sketchbook is his account of the two months he spent there.
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From The ProsenPeople
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One of the things that I find most compelling about Judaism is the idea of b'shert.
Need a good book, but don't know where to start? Check out our reading lists...
I always begin like this, with Irv, my grandfather, and then I describe him, An angel on Earth, never another like him. I repeat this as I have been told, though he died long before I was born.
New Reviews
This week's reviews...
Okay, time to get excited people. We're only two months away from the pub date of Sami Rohr Prize Winner Austin Ratner's new novel In the Land of the Living.
I thought I had entered completely into the world of my novel: Boyle Heights in the 1920s and 30s, when the Los Angeles neighborhood was home to some 50,000 Jews and a center for Jewish life. Then I started getting questions from Tony.
Join the Center for Jewish History for the inaugural program in their new series on contemporary American Jewish writers, highlighting the work of both fiction and non-fiction authors in the long tradition of American Jewish literature. This event is co-sponsored by the Jewish Book Council.
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Check back all week for guest blog posts from Janice Steinberg for the Jewish Book Council and MyJewishLearning's Visiting Scribe series!
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Do you have a Jewish-interest book or product? Reach out to the Jewish Book Council audience! For information on advertising opportunities, please click HERE.
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