Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Malamud, Bernard - Dorothy Seidman Bilik (essay date 1981)
Malamud, Bernard - Dorothy Seidman Bilik (essay date 1981)
Dorothy Seidman Bilik (essay date 1981)
SOURCE: Bilik, Dorothy Seidman. “Malamud's Secular Saints and Comic Jobs.” In Immigrant-Survivors: Post-Holocaust Consciousness in Recent Jewish American Fiction, pp. 53-80. Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1981.
[In the following essay, Bilik explores the ways in which Malamud diverges from the conventions of the majority of post-Holocaust Jewish fiction.]
No contemporary American writer has written about immigrants and survivors more frequently or more imaginatively than has Bernard Malamud. His fictional world is peopled with Diasporans of all kinds but, unlike Cahan's assimilated Levinsky, Malamud's characters embody significant fragments of the Jewish past. Most frequently Malamud portrays remnants of the earlier generation of immigrants, unwilling refugees from American Jewish affluence, survivors of an older Jewish community who retain unassimilated Jewish values and who do...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Bernard Malamud and Leslie and Joyce Field (interview date 1975)
- Jackson J. Benson (essay date 1977)
- Irving Malin (essay date fall 1980)
- Iska Alter (essay date 1981)
- Iska Alter (essay date 1981)
- Dorothy Seidman Bilik (essay date 1981)
- Chiara Briganti (essay date 1983)
- Barbara Koenig Quart (essay date 1983)
- Ellen Pifer (essay date fall 1988)
- Arvindra Sant (essay date fall 1988)
- James M. Mellard (essay date 1989)
- Irving H. Buchen (essay date spring 1990)
- Victoria Aarons (essay date spring 1992)
- Sharon Deykin Baris (essay date spring 1992)
- Edward A. Abramson (essay date 1993)
- Edward A. Abramson (essay date 1993)
- Peter C. Brown (essay date spring 1997)
- Andrew Furman (essay date 1997)
- John A. Lauricella (essay date 1999)
- Further Reading
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