Sunday, October 30, 2011

This one has created quite a stir

Some people believe Sarah Silverman pokes fun at the Holocaust.

The Sarah Silverman Program

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Gershom Gorenberg on the battle of an Israeli novelist for a secular Jewish identity

Yoram Kaniuk has won: The prominent Israeli novelist is now very officially a Jew of no religion. Hundreds of other Israelis, inspired by his legal victory, want to follow his example and change their religious status to “none” in the country’s Population Registry, while remaining Jews by nationality in the same government database. A new verb has entered Hebrew, lehitkaniuk, to Kaniuk oneself, to legally register an internal divorce of Jewish ethnicity from Jewish religion.
For the full text of the article, published in the American Prospect, go HERE.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Performing an American Persona: On "Jesus is Magic"

The following are a few thoughts on Sarah Silverman’s Jesus Is Magic, Aaron Tillman pulled for us from his essay “‘Through the Rube Goldberg Crazy Straw’: Ethnic Mobility and Narcissistic Fantasy in Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic” (Studies in American Humor 2009).

In her performance film Jesus Is Magic, Sarah Silverman cultivates the indefinable territory––the territory that resists taxonomy (“that thing that you just can’t define” is the line she sings before the stage portion of her film)––portraying herself in a multitude of ways, depending on the circumstances: as Jewish, as white, as cute, as straight, as thin. She uses stereotypes of her Jewish American identity to indulge a conversation about extreme materialism; she uses the ethnic connotation of Jewish American to feign sensitivity to accusations made by an Asian American watchdog group; she uses religious mythology to claim a “chosen” privilege; she uses a connection to historical atrocity to perform self-righteous indignation; she uses her fair complexion to deny any ethnic association. Despite the elasticity of Silverman’s persona, there is a consistency and a familiarity that her audience can recognize. Such recognition enables her observations and conclusions to shed light on our national and cultural landscape. The more she extends her performance, the more recognizably ludicrous––and potentially poignant––her satire becomes.

In her portrayal of an assimilated, narcissistic, Jewish American woman, Silverman ridicules a movement in American culture, one that impacts the development of the budding American persona. She is satirizing the “MySpace” generation, where the projection of and consumption with the self has reached new levels. It is a generation of consent by convenience, where issues of ethnicity and culture are played up or down based solely on how they affect the self.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Saul Bellow on the "metic" writer

In this week's NYReview of Books, Saul Bellow, until his death a member of the BU faculty, meditates on the Jewish writer as an outsider, commenting on the larger phenomenon of the writer as the outsider, especially in the context of the US, a land of immigrants:

In twentieth-century Europe the métèque writers appear in considerable numbers. Métèque is defined in French dictionaries as “outsider” or “resident alien,” and the term is pejorative. The word appears in the OED as “metic,” although it is not in general use here. The novelist Anthony Burgess refers to métèques and makes a strong defense of the métèque writer—the nonnative who, being on the fringe of a language and the culture that begot it, is alleged to lack respect (so say the pundits) for the finer rules of English idiom and grammar, for “the genius of the language.” For, says Burgess, the genius of the English language, being plastic, is as ready to yield to the métèque as to the racially pure and grammatically orthodox:

If we are to regard Poles and Irishmen as métèques there are grounds for supposing that the métèques have done more for English in the twentieth century (meaning that they have shown what the language is really capable of, or demonstrated what English is really like) than any of the pure-blooded men of letters who stick to the finer rules.

Burgess’s Irishman is Joyce, his Pole Joseph Conrad, and we can easily add to his list Apollinaire in French, Isaac Babel, Mandelstam, and Pasternak in Russian, Kafka in German, Svevo in Italian (or Triestine), and for good measure V.S. Naipaul or Vladimir Nabokov. Indeed it is not easy in this cosmopolitan age to remove the métèques from modern literature without leaving it very thin.

I might have asked Agnon how well the Arabic of Maimonides had been translated into Hebrew. I lacked the presence of mind then, and even here my remark is slightly out of place.

In the US, a land of foreigners who may or may not be in the process of forming a national type (who can predict how it will all turn out?), a term like métèque or metic is inapplicable. To renew the purity of the tribe was a French project, and a man whose French is acceptable to the French is, at least in the act of speaking, a claimant to aristocratic status. But gentile New York and Brahmin Boston never dominated American speech, and the aristocratic pretensions of easterners were good for a laugh in the rest of the country. Yet when our own metics, the Jewish, Italian, and Armenian descendants of immigrants, began after World War I to write novels, they caused great discomfort, and in some quarters, alarm and anger.

Irving Howe has noted in a reminiscence of the Partisan Review days that

portions of the native intellectual elite…found the modest fame of the New York writers insufferable. Soon they were mumbling that American purities of speech and spirit were being contaminated by the streets of New York…. Anti-Semitism had become publicly disreputable in the years after the Holocaust, a thin coating of shame having settled on civilized consciousness; but this hardly meant that some native writers…would lack a vocabulary for private use about those New York usurpers, those Bronx and Brooklyn wise guys who proposed to reshape American literary life. When Truman Capote later attacked the Jewish writers on television, he had the dissolute courage to say what more careful gentlemen said quietly among themselves.

Capote said that a Jewish mafia was taking over American literature and New York publishing as well. He was to write in a later book that Jews should be stuffed and put in a natural history museum.2

I owe too much to writers like R.P. Warren, who was so generous to me when I was starting out, and to John Berryman, John Cheever, and other poets, novelists, and critics of American descent to complain of neglect, discrimination, or abuse. Most Americans judged you according to your merit, and to the majority of readers it couldn’t have mattered less where your parents were born.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Reinventing Rosh Hashanah

What are you doing to mark the Jewish new year? Susan Seligson (BU Today/Bostonia Magazine) interviews a number of people on campus who share their ideas. See http://www.bu.edu/today/2011/reinventing-rosh-hashanah/.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

The Silvermans at BU

Reserve your seat for Sister Act: Comedienne Sarah Silverman and BU alumna Reform Rabbi Susan Silverman in conversation with Dean Virginia Sapiro (CAS) on growing up Jewish in New Hampshire and making the best of it.
SMG Auditorium, November 8@8pm.
BUID required to rsvp and for admission.
Go to http://www.bu.edu/otherwithin/events to rsvp.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

The curious case of the Falash Mura

This summer, Len Lyons, who previously spoke at BU on the absorption of Ethiopians in Israel, has visited the remaining community of Falash Mura in Ethiopia. His report of this group of "others within" appears in the current edition of the Forward.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Sexuality, Secularization, and the Rise of Modern Jewish Literature

Naomi Seidman lecture and reception

Starts: 5:00 pm on Thursday, March 31, 2011
Ends: 6:30 pm on Thursday, March 31, 2011
Location: Boston University Hillel 213 Bay State Rd., 4th Floor Boston, MA 02215
Sexuality, Secularization, and the Rise of Modern Jewish Literature A lecture by Dr. Naomi Seidman Koret Professor of Jewish Culture and Director of the Center for Jewish Studies at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California This lecture is sponsored by “The Other Within,” an initiative funded by the Center for Cultural Judaism with generous support from the Jewish Cultural Endowment.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Musical Others Within-A lecture by ethno-musicologist Edwin Seroussi


Edwin Seroussi: "The Musical Other Within"

Starts: 5:00 pm on Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Ends: 7:00 pm on Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Location: BU Hillel House (Reform Chapel)
URL: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=111748668897013
Ethnomusicologist and Hebrew University Professor Edwin Seroussi will lecture on "Musical Others Within: Sephardic Liturgy and the Soundscape of the Reform Movement of Judaism." The lecture will be followed by a reception.

Sephardic Jewish Arabic Moroccan Gitano Flamenco song & dance Al-Andalus


In anticipation of Edwin Seroussi's lecture on "Musical Others Within" it is fun to scour the internet for Sephardic music recordings. This one was submitted by my friend Tom Kalmar. (Thanks, Tomas!)

Sunday, January 16, 2011

"Reboot" -- Jews searching for meaning in being Jewish

In today's NYTimes "Styles" section, an article on "reboot", an initiative for young individuals who are searching to find a new meaning in what it means to be Jewish. See HERE.

The National Yiddish Book Center in recent news ...

Financial trouble at the National Yiddish Book Center and grumblings with the direction its leadership has taken beyond its original mission of rescuing Yiddish literature from extinction are the headline issues of a recent article on the center in the Boston Globe.