University Press of America
Pages: 141
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-0-7618-3915-6 • Paperback • December 2007 • $41.99 • (£32.00)
Moshe Pelli is Director of the Interdisciplinary Program in Judaic Studies and Abe and Tess Wise Endowed Professor of Judaic Studies at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, Fl. Professor Pelli's major area of specialization is Modern Hebrew Literature. He has written extensively on the Literature of the Holocaust and has published 11 scholarly books and numerous research papers. Professor Pelli was honored with numerous awards for his teaching, research and contributions to Jewish Studies and to Hebrew culture, including the 1991 Friedman Prize for Hebrew Culture in America, and the Distinguished Researcher of the Year Award for 1996 and 2006 at UCF. He is President of the National Association of Professors of Hebrew in the U.S.A.
Part 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction: "Literature after Auschwitz"?
Part 3 The Holocaust Experience From Within
Chapter 4 Aharon Appelfeld: Premonition and Illusion in the Pre-Holocaust Years in Badenheim 1939
Chapter 5 Elie Wiesel: The Night of Auschwitz —The Right to Question
Chapter 6 Primo Levi: Survival in Auschwitz — An Essay on Man
Chapter 7 Ka-tzetnik: 'Star of Ashes' Becomes Star Eternal — Depiction of Another Planet
Chapter 8 Jerzy Kosinki: The Painted Bird — The Risk of Metaphor
Part 9 After the Holocaust — Experience from Without
Chapter 10 Hanoch Bartov: Late Encounter with the Holocaust - Paradigms, Rhythms, and Concepts in The Brigade
Chapter 11 Hayim Gouri: Concept of Post-Holocaust Reality in The Chocolate Deal
Chapter 12 Yehuda Amichai: Fractured Soul in a Split Reality after the Holocaust in Not of This Time, Not of This Place
Part 13 Bibliography
Part 14 Authors and Artists Biographies
Part 15 About the Author; Books by the Author
Pelli's book introduces the commencing evolution of the Hebrew/Jewish Haskalah movement in the late eighteenth century in Prussia with both elucidating attention and penetrating insight. This book casts a valuable light upon the Haskalah's agenda and accomplishments: the rebirth of Hebrew letters, the revival of the Hebrew language, and the rejuvenation of the Jewish people...Pelli's book is a praisworthy work of scholarship that introduces the Haskalah literature in the most fastidious and brilliant. fashion...
— Yair Mazor, Ph.D., Professor, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee; Hebrew Studies
Pelli's book introduces the commencing evolution of the Hebrew/Jewish Haskalah movement in the late eighteenth century in Prussia with both elucidating attention and penetrating insight. This book casts a valuable light upon the Haskalah's agenda and accomplishments: the rebirth of Hebrew letters, the revival of the Hebrew language, and the rejuvenation of the Jewish people...Pelli's book is a praisworthy work of scholarship that introduces the Haskalah literature in the most fastidious and brilliant.fashion.
— Yair Mazor, Ph.D., Professor, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee; Hebrew Studies