With Both Feet on the Clouds
Fantasy in Israeli Literature
Danielle Gurevitch author Elana Gomel editor Danielle Gurevitch editor Rani Graff editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Academic Studies Press
Published:28th Feb '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Why do Israelis dislike fantasy? Put so bluntly, the question appears frivolous. But in fact, it goes to the deepest sources of Israeli historical identity and literary tradition. Uniquely among developed nations, Israel’s origin is in a utopian novel, Theodor Herzl’s Altneuland (1902), which predicted the future Jewish state. The Jewish writing in the Diaspora has always tended toward the fantastic, the mystical, and the magical. And yet, from its very inception, Israeli literature has been stubbornly realistic.
The present volume challenges this stance. Originally published in Hebrew in 2009, it is the first serious, wide-ranging and theoretically sophisticated exploration of fantasy in Israeli literature and culture. Its contributors jointly attempt to contest the question posed at the beginning: why do Israelis, living in a country whose very existence is predicated on the fulfilment of a utopian dream, distrust fantasy?
“From the Talmudic sages to Bashevis-Singer, from medieval story-tellers to young contemporary Israeli writers, Jewish fantasy has been a treasure trove of the imagination, at least on a par with Greek and Norse mythologies. Yet unlike them, it has only rarely received scholarly attention. That is why this volume is so badly needed, and so timely, as interest in fantasy is becoming more intense worldwide.”–Emanuel Lottem, co-founder and first chairperson, Israeli Society for Science Fiction and Fantasy
ISBN: 9781936235834
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
312 pages