Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Singer, Isaac Bashevis - Joseph Sherman (essay date 1995)
Singer, Isaac Bashevis - Joseph Sherman (essay date 1995)
Joseph Sherman (essay date 1995)
SOURCE: Sherman, Joseph. “Scrutinizing the Shtetl: I. B. Singer's ‘Tseytl un Rikl.’” Prooftexts 15, no. 2 (May 1995): 129-44.
[In the following essay, Sherman examines Singer's short story “Tseytl un Rikl” in terms of its setting in a Jewish shtetl, the narrative monologue, and the themes of sin and virtue.]
1
Among the many ambivalences that vitalize Singer's work is his treatment of the shtetl. In his Nobel Lecture (1978) he lauded it as “a great experiment in peace, in self-discipline, and in humanism,”1 yet, with few exceptions, in his fiction he vigorously interrogated its failure to demonstrate any of these qualities.2 Setting the ideal against the real, Singer measures divine potential against human incapacity. His skepticism recognizes that Revealed Truth, if it exists, can operate in this world only when fallible human will subordinates itself to...
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Criticism
- David Evanier (review date 1988)
- Morton Ritts (review date 1988)
- Bryan Cheyette (review date 1988)
- Sean French (review date 1988)
- Lillian Schanfield (essay date 1988)
- Janet Hadda (essay date 1990)
- Margaret M. Boland (essay date 1990)
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- Martin Schwarz (essay date 1990)
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- Peter Stenberg (essay date 1991)
- Joseph Sherman (essay date 1994)
- Joseph Sherman (essay date 1995)
- Grace Farrell (essay date 1996)
- Nancy Berkowitz Bate (essay date 1996)
- Alice R. Kaminsky (essay date 1998)
- Stephen J. Whitfield (essay date 1999)
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