Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Agnon, S. Y. - Esther Fuchs (essay date fall 1985)
Agnon, S. Y. - Esther Fuchs (essay date fall 1985)
Esther Fuchs (essay date fall 1985)
SOURCE: Fuchs, Esther. “Wherefrom Did Gediton Enter Gumlidata? Realism and Comic Subversiveness in ‘Forevermore’.” Modern Language Studies 15, no. 4 (fall 1985): 64-79.
[In the following essay, Fuchs deconstructs an Agnon story emphasizing the central irony, which she claims other critics have neglected.]
1. INTRODUCTION
S. Y. Agnon's story “Ad Olam” (“Forevermore”) has stirred much critical controversy over its ideological meaning. Meshulam Tochner sees the story as a polemic against modern Biblical criticism and modern Hebrew literature.1 Eddy Zemach claims that the story argues against secular Judaism.2 Hillel Barzel maintains that the story demonstrates the transience of secular political statehood by displaying the way in which “one secular civilization is destroyed by another.”3 Despite the considerable differences between these...
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Criticism
- Bernard Knieger (review date 1975)
- Nehama Aschkenasy (essay date winter 1983)
- Jeffrey M. Green (review date spring-summer 1984)
- Esther Fuchs (essay date fall 1985)
- Yair Mazor (essay date 1986)
- Gershon Shaked (essay date 1986)
- Arnold Band (essay date 1987)
- Cynthia Ozick (essay date December 1988)
- Nitza Ben-Dov (essay date September 1989)
- Alan L. Mintz (review date February 1990)
- Anne Golomb Hoffman (essay date 1991)
- Naomi B. Sokoloff (essay date 1994)
- Aharon Appelfeld (essay date spring-summer 1995)
- Mark Bernheim (review date summer 1997)
- William Riggan (essay date 1998)
- Shulamit Almog (essay date fall 1999)
- David G. Roskies (essay date 2003)
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