Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Agnon, S. Y. - Baruch Hochman (essay date 1970)
Agnon, S. Y. - Baruch Hochman (essay date 1970)
Baruch Hochman (essay date 1970)
SOURCE: "The Whole Loaf: Agnon's Tales of the Ancestral World," in The Fiction of S. Y. Agnon, Cornell University Press, 1970, pp. 29-52.
[In the following excerpt, Hochman surveys Agnon's short fiction treating the culture of the shtetl, the Hebrew village prior to the nineteenth century.]
About a third of Agnon's work directly reflects the culture of the shtetl before its final decline. Entirely devoted to a limited range of experience in the century preceding Agnon's birth, such work takes the form of folk tales in the idiom of the faithful who enjoyed the "whole loaf" of experience within the ancestral tradition. The civilization of the shtetl had defined itself for centuries almost entirely in terms of that tradition. Agnon attempts to render the quality of experience within it.
If one seeks a spiritual center of gravity within the Agnonic shtetl one finds it...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Curt Leviant (essay date 1970)
- Baruch Hochman (essay date 1970)
- Robert Alter (essay date 1972)
- Leon I. Yudkin (essay date 1974)
- Bernard Knieger (essay date 1975)
- Harold Fisch (essay date 1975)
- Esther Fuchs (essay date 1983)
- David Aberbach (essay date 1984)
- Esther Fuchs (essay date 1985)
- Lev Hakak (essay date 1986)
- Yair Mazor (essay date 1986)
- Naomi Sokoloff (essay date 1988)
- Miri Kubovy (essay date 1989)
- Gershon Shaked (essay date 1989)
- Lippman Bodoff (essay date 1993)
- Nitza Ben-Dov (essay date 1993)
- Naomi B. Sokoloff (essay date 1994)
- Further Reading
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