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Crisis and Covenant

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Explores how Jewish American writers have grappled with the enormity of the Holocaust.In Crisis and Covenant, Alan L. Berger delivers a powerful and thought-provoking exploration of how American Je...
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  • 01 October 1985
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Explores how Jewish American writers have grappled with the enormity of the Holocaust.

In Crisis and Covenant, Alan L. Berger delivers a powerful and thought-provoking exploration of how American Jewish fiction has grappled with the cataclysm of the Holocaust. Situating literature at the crossroads of memory, theology, and identity, Berger examines how post-Auschwitz Jewish writers reinterpret the ancient concept of Covenant in light of unprecedented historical trauma.

Through nuanced readings of major American Jewish authors—including Saul Bellow, Cynthia Ozick, Bernard Malamud, Elie Wiesel, Philip Roth, and others—Berger traces the transformation of Jewish thought from religious and secular perspectives, exploring how the Holocaust serves as both a rupture and a point of reflection in modern Jewish narrative. He addresses the crucial question: Can fiction truly represent the Holocaust, and if so, what responsibilities do Jewish writers bear?

Divided into thematic responses—religious, secular, and symbolic—Crisis and Covenant reveals how these authors wrestle with Jewish identity, memory, and survival in a world shadowed by genocide. Blending literary criticism with theological inquiry, Berger presents a compelling study that challenges easy categorizations and opens new avenues for understanding American Jewish literature and its ongoing dialogue with history.

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Price: £72.50
Pages: 234
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Modern Jewish Literature and Culture
Publication Date: 01 October 1985
ISBN: 9780887060854
Format: Hardcover
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"I am convinced that this book will be an important contribution to the understanding of events and issues that defy understanding. "Much has been written about the theology of the Holocaust, and also about the literature of the Holocaust. What Alan Berger has done is to combine both. Furthermore, he deals more with writers than with concepts, or rather: he deals with concepts through the works of writers." — Elie Wiesel, Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities, Boston University

"How have American, Jewish writers of fiction faced the Holocaust in a post-Auschwitz world? In a penetrating critique of Bellow, Ozick, Roth, Nissenson, Malamud, et al., Alan L. Berger raises this crucial question and examines it against the ancient and modern claims of the Covenant as it has acted within Jewish life and in religious Judaism. What results is a book insightful, thoughtful, carefully crafted, that establishes Berger as a first-rate critic who has fully mastered the fiction and the writers whom he examines. He is also an established Holocaust scholar. The combination provides all students of American fiction with a major new work of high merit." — Robert W. Ross, University of Minnesota

"This thoughtful and fresh book casts a beam of light in a dark, unexplored literary horizon. It reveals how the central Jewish writers of our time grapple with the awesome, horrifying implications of the Holocaust. Many of these authors—Ozick, Malamud, Nissenson, and Singer, for example—are not usually considered Holocaust writers, but this book breaks beyond the easy categories of theology and literary criticism. Berger skillfully demonstrates here the interweaving of Jewish destiny and meaning with literary and narrative invention. An original, arresting and important work." — Irving Greenberg, President, National Jewish Resource Center

1. Introduction: Jewish Existence


Covenant Transformations


Covenant and Modernity


The Contemporary Covenantal Crisis


Literary Response to Covenant Crisis


American Judaism and the Holocaust


Contributions of American Jewish Holocaust Novelists


2. Holocaust as Watershed


Holocaust Problematics


Theological Responses


Theology and Literature


Is the Holocaust Beyond Artistic Expression?


Who Should Write of the Holocaust?


Trivializing the Holocaust


American Jewish Writers and the Holocaust: A Critique


The Role of the American Jewish Novelist


3. Holocaust Responses I: Judaism as a Religious Value System


The Holocaust and American Diaspora Jewry


Hasidic Tales


Considering the Evidence


Arthur A. Cohen


Cynthia Ozick


Hugh Nissenson


Elie Wiesel


Isaac B. Singer


Conclusion


4. Holocaust Responses II: Judaism as a Secular Value System


Considering the Evidence


Bernard Malamud


Saul Bellow


Susan F. Schaeffer


Cynthia Ozick


Pre-Holocaust America: Jewish Existence and Covenant Diminishment


Hugh Nissenson


Robert Kotlowitz


Conclusion



5. Holocaust Responses III: Symbolic Judaism


Considering the Evidence


Philip Roth


Richard Elman


Edward Lewis Wallant


Norma Rosen


Bernard Malamud


Conclusion


6. Holocaust and Covenant


The Central Question for Contemporary Judaism


Holocaust Fiction Lato Sensu


Problems and Possibilities


Notes


Index