TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-fashioning in front of a Distorting Mirror
T2 - Interwar Jewish Literature Gazing at Classical Chinese Poetry, or Second Order Modernism
AU - Ticotsky, Giddon
N1 - Dibur Literary Journal special issue: Peripheral modernism Issue 9–10, Fall 2020 - Spring 2021 Issue editors: Vered K. Shemtov, Melih Levi
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The modernist fascination with the Far East is a well-known phenomenon, driven among other things by the "decline of the West" zeitgeist. When adopted by peripheral communities involved in nation building, it often served other needs and, in the process, became distorted or disproportioned. This article focuses on the representation of the Far East in the Hebrew and Yiddish literatures of the interwar years. Its main argument is that the longing for the Far East in these literatures has contributed to their self-fashioning precisely as occidental and modern. Accordingly, this is an intriguing test case that sheds light on how one peripheral culture gazes at another, how one Other gazes at another-as opposed to traditional postcolonial research that tends to examine Self-Other or majority-minority relations. The article proposes the term "second-order modernism" to describe the fertile changes and disruptions inherent to the displacement of any modernist model onto a peripheral culture.
AB - The modernist fascination with the Far East is a well-known phenomenon, driven among other things by the "decline of the West" zeitgeist. When adopted by peripheral communities involved in nation building, it often served other needs and, in the process, became distorted or disproportioned. This article focuses on the representation of the Far East in the Hebrew and Yiddish literatures of the interwar years. Its main argument is that the longing for the Far East in these literatures has contributed to their self-fashioning precisely as occidental and modern. Accordingly, this is an intriguing test case that sheds light on how one peripheral culture gazes at another, how one Other gazes at another-as opposed to traditional postcolonial research that tends to examine Self-Other or majority-minority relations. The article proposes the term "second-order modernism" to describe the fertile changes and disruptions inherent to the displacement of any modernist model onto a peripheral culture.
M3 - Article
SN - 2228-3552
SP - 99
EP - 110
JO - Dibur: Literary Journal
JF - Dibur: Literary Journal
IS - 9-10
ER -