LEADER 03833ctm a2200397Ia 4500001 149565 005 20240621183645.0 008 090311s2009 xx b 000 0 eng d 035 (OCoLC)ocn547463552 035 149565 049 LHMA 040 LHM |beng |erda |cLHM 090 PQ4034.2 |b.V37 2009 100 1 Vassileva, Borislava Vassileva. 245 10 Post-WW II Italian Jewish narratives : |bappropriations of history and self-representation / |cby Borislava Vassileva Vassileva. 264 0 |c2009. 300 vi, 250 pages 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 337 unmediated |bn |2rdamedia 338 volume |bnc |2rdacarrier 500 "January 2009." 502 Thesis (Ph.D.)--Harvard University, 2009. 504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 237-250). 520 This dissertation proposes to trace a literary genealogy: that of the contemporary Jewish writer who expresses him or herself in the language of Dante and interrogates the sense of their Jewishness. The preliminary sections reach back to the time of Jewish emancipation and the unification of Italy in order to outline the reasons for Italian Jews' high degree of integration and patriotic involvement, as well as the only marginal treatment of Jewish topics in literature before the Shoah. Against this backdrop, the period 1938-1945 marks a traumatic moment of rupture and the beginning of an effort to endow the sense of difference, imposed on Italian Jews by the racial laws, into a positive awareness of a collective cultural specificity or a personal sense of belonging.The literary corpus presented here adopts first-hand experience of this period as its limit and is structured as consecutive analyses of individual authors. It includes celebrated figures (Primo Levi, Giorgio Bassani, Elsa Morante, Natalia Ginzburg) and less known writers (Giorgio Voghera, Franco Fortini, Alberto Vigevani), as well as the generation emerging in the 80s and the 90s (Dan Vittorio Segre, Lia Levi, Aldo Zargani). The twofold aim that the study pursues is to acknowledge individual variety, while bringing to focus what is shared, whether it is lived in similar ways or borrowed from the collective.Several common motifs emerge in the course of the study, notably the enormity of the Shoah and its difficult memory, the perceived distance from the Zionist project, and reversely, the sense that the Italian Jewish experience constitutes a special case. Beyond these thematic convergences, however, this corpus of writing is characterized by a heightened awareness of the way collective identities are constructed. Primo Levi's notion of "making a past for oneself' proves applicable not only to the conscious or unconscious distortions of history, but more generally, to the way each individual negotiates their past and what they assume as heritage, influences, or affinities. More than a single act of self-definition, each writer's sense of being Jewish emerges as a life-long, sometimes conflicted, process of reflection and self-fashioning. 530 Electronic version(s) |bavailable internally at USHMM. 533 Photocopy. |bAnn Arbor, Mich. : |cUMI Dissertation Services. |e22 cm. 591 Record updated by Marcive processing 21 June 2024 650 0 Italian literature |xJewish authors |xHistory and criticism. 650 0 Italian literature |y20th century |xHistory and criticism. 650 0 Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature. 650 0 Judaism in literature. 856 41 |uhttp://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1702774991&sid=17&Fmt=6&clientId=54617&RQT=309&VName=PQD |zElectronic version from ProQuest 956 41 |uhttp://dc.ushmm.org/library/bib149565/3351013.pdf |zHosted by USHMM. 852 0 |bstacks |hPQ4034.2 |i.V37 2009 852 |bwww 852 |bebook