Thursday, June 29, 2023

Yekl Meets the Gradute

 


Yekl: A Tale of the New York Ghetto by Abraham Cahan is such an expected piece of American literature of early twentieth-century immigrants, that there are few surprises here.  

The Yekl of the title comes to America, leaving behind, temporarily, his wife and young son.  As three years pass, he becomes Jake, abandons religious Judaism, and acts like a bachelor.  He is eager to Americanize.  His wife arrives, she is a greenhorn, and their relationship sours.  

Jake tries to get out of his marriage and begin a marriage with another, more worldly woman, but the results of this are uncertain.  The end of the novel has a The Graduate feel.  Jake has acted impulsively, and wonders if what will happen next will bring him happiness. 

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Scriptorium: Poems by Melissa Range

 


Scriptorium: Poems by Melissa Range is an extraordinary collection.  In a small space, Range accomplishes very much.  She is able to craft poems that speak to her Appalachian upbringing, mixed with a range of English with an antiquated tone/sense, along with commentaries on the craft of the scribe in monasteries.  All these themes are seamlessly woven into one.  Range has provided poems that are similar yet expansive, and richly drawn. 

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Judaisms

 



The study of Jewish history has always had to wrestle with the question of Jewish continuity across time and distance, and discontinuity and difference.  Cultures of the Jews: A New History edited by David Biale, takes more the former stance than the latter.  The scholars in this large volume, 1234 pages, generally see differences and disjuncture across Jewish time and space. But this is not uniformly held. Some Jewish communities had close ties to others at great distances and relied on each other on multiple levels.

But generally, the wide variety of "Judaisms" is explored here.  An overall, ideal form of “Judaism” does not float over these essays.  The plural of the title says it all.


Thursday, June 8, 2023

Interesting... but Circular

 

The Original Torah: The Political Intent of the Bible's Writers (Reappraisals Jewish Social History) by S. David Sperling is a very good, interesting book, but like all books like this, who knows if it is true? I have no doubt that the writers of the bible often had a political intent behind the stories they told.  But what is our standard?  Sperling uses allegory to read political intent into certain stories, but for others, he uses those stories as sources for the allegorical stories.  This kind of reasoning is circular.

I really enjoy reading these types of books.  They help me understand the Tanakh in new and interesting ways.  But we won’t have any certainty about compositional issues of the bible until ancient versions of the documents, and the sources of the biblical text are discovered (an unlikely scenario),  Until then, books like this will be theoretical.  

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Night in the American Village

 


Night in the American Village: Women in the Shadow of the U.S. Military Bases in Okinawa by Akemi Johnson shines a light on a part of American involvement in Asia that practically no Americans know about.  After the Battle of Okinawa in 1945, American forces remained on the island, and the bases have become a part of the island – both for good and ill.

Johnson presents a very balanced approach to Okinawa and the U.S. presence on the island.  She handles the horrific sexual assaults and murders of local women by American military personnel, but also shows how the American presence on the island is a boon to many local people; they are exposed to the wider world than most Japanese experience and benefit financially and socially from the Americans.

She also refuses to victimize the Okinawans.  She treats them as fully dimensional people, who are active in their own lives, and pursue their self-interests as they see them.