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El. knyga: Evolutions of Jewish Character in British Fiction: Nor Yet Redeemed

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Evolutions of Jewish Character in British Fiction: Nor Yet Redeemed builds upon recent scholarship concerning representations of Jews in the British Romantic and Victorian periods. Existing studies identify common trends, or link positive Jewish portrayals to authorial interests and social movements; this volume argues that understanding developments in Jewish portrayals can be enhanced by looking at the way antecedent Jewish characters and tropes are negotiated within developing literary movements. Evolutions of Jewish Character in British Fiction examines how the contradictory nature of Jewish stereotypes, combined with the Jews’ complicated entanglement of religion, race, and nationality, presented an opportunity for writers to think about the gap between representations and individuals. The tension between stereotyping and realist impulses lead to a diversity of Jewish types, but also to an increasingly muddled sense of Jewish interests. This confusion over Jewish identity generated in turn a subgenre of texts that sought to educate readers about Jews by interrogating stereotypes and thinking about the Jews’ relationships to host cultures. In a literary landscape increasingly defined by individuality and realism, outcast and secretive Jews provided subjects ready-made to reveal the inadequacies of surfaces for understanding the interior self. The replacement of simplistic Jewish stereotypes with morally complex Jewish characters is an effect both of realism’s valuation of interiority and of the historical movement toward expanding the definitions of British identity.

Preface vii
Introduction: "What Is a Jew?": Stereotypes, Realism, and the Construction of Character 1(22)
1 Shylock's Metamorphoses and the Jew Bill Controversy
23(30)
2 The Political Valences of Jews in the Revolutionary Decade
53(28)
3 Radical Selfhood: The Jew as Anti-Hero
81(19)
4 Historicizing Jewish National Character
100(37)
5 Anglo-Jews, or Jews in England?
137(38)
Conclusion: The Shifting Ground of Jewish Representation 175(8)
Works Cited 183(8)
Index 191
Aaron S. Kaiserman holds a PhD from the University of Ottawa and has taught courses in general fiction and childrens literature. This monograph expands on his doctoral thesis on the evolution of Jewish portrayals. His publications include: "Wandering through Bowers Beloved: The Wandering Jew and the Woman Poet in Caroline Nortons The Undying One". Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies Vol. 11.1 (Spring 2015); and "(De)Radicalism: Rootlessness and the Subversive Power of Money in Godwins Caleb Williams and St Leon". Lumen Vol. 32 (2013).