Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Agnon, S. Y. - Lippman Bodoff (essay date 1993)
Agnon, S. Y. - Lippman Bodoff (essay date 1993)
Lippman Bodoff (essay date 1993)
SOURCE: "Kabbalistic Feminism in Agnon's 'Betrothed'," in Judaism, Vol. 42, Fall, 1993, pp. 423-34.
[In the following essay, Bodoff interprets Betrothed as a symbolic tale in which the modern Jew (represented by the protagonist Jacob) is torn between Hebraism (in the figure of Shoshanah) and the appeal of the secular worldliness (as symbolized by Jacob's travels, career, and involvement with gentile women).]
INTRODUCTION
The struggle to provide and maintain a Jewish identity as the core of Israeli culture, in the face of the chasm in Jewish life opened up by modernity between the self and reason at war with community and faith, is an underlying theme in much of Agnon's work. He simultaneously developed this theme and reflected it in his writing technique, by using modern literary approaches to character analysis and plot development, together with traditional Jewish symbols,...
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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)
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- 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)
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