Fall 2009
HEB 374 • INTRO TO ISRAELI LITERATURE-W
| Unique | Days | Time | Location | Instructor |
| 42145 |
TTh |
11:00 AM-12:30 PM |
UTC 4.120 |
GRUMBERG, K |
Course Description
This course will encompass almost six decades of fiction, from the 1948 declaration of Israeli independence to the present time. We will read the works of the first Israeli generation from the late 1940s and early 1950s, and continue with those of the State Generation, or New Wave (including Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua), of the 1950s-1980s. We will continue with contemporary writing by women, Mizrahim, and Israeli Arabs, and, finally, arrive at postmodernism. Our explorations of Israeli literature will be marked by points of political turbulence and upheaval, beginning with the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and culminating in the current Al-Aqsa Intifada. Along the way, we will examine some major themes of Israeli literature, including the shift from collective concerns to individual ones, the disillusionment with Zionism, the creation of an Israeli identity, and intergenerational conflicts. We will also consider the interaction between literature and various tensions in Israeli society (Jews and Arabs, Mizrahim and Ashkenazim, the religious and the secular).
Grading Policy
Paper 1, 4-5 pages 15% Paper 2 (Rewrite) 5-6 pages 25% Paper 3, 7-8 pages 30% Participation 30%
Texts
Agnon, Book Lost; Yehoshua, "Facing Forests"; Kashua, Dancing Arabs; Oz, "Nomad & Viper"; Matalon, Bliss; Grossman, "Yani on the Mountain"; Shamir, Walked Through Fields; Megged, Living on Dead; Hareven, City Many Days; Shalev, Blue Mountain; Appelfeld, Badenheim; Castel-Bloom, Human Parts.



