New York

“Imaginary Homelands” at the Mina Gallery

by · 11/01/11

The Mina Gallery in Cooper Sq. will host a new exhibit titled Imaginary Homelands. The exhibition runs from October 28th to December 6th. The featured artists–Noa Charuvi, Gil Even-Tsur, Leor Grady, Yael Hameiri, Ohad Matalon, Rachel Papo, Benjamin Tritt, Eitan Vitkon—have all demonstrated in their various works how they experience life under two identities: Israeli and American. The exhibit will feature photography, architecture, painting, sculpture, installation, and paper and video works.

The title of the exhibition is taken from Salman Rushdie’s collection of essays titled Imaginary Homelands in which Rushdie contemplates the Diaspora experience. The immigrant, the exile and the member of diaspora are all figures whose existence is predicated upon finding a balance between their past and present, home and the illusion of stasis. The collection includes seventy-five essays that delve into the issues surrounding migration, national identity, religion, racism, politics in literature, and even literature itself.

From the website:

Rushdie spoke of this attempt to find balance between multiple cultures that is felt by every immigrant, member of a diaspora or victim of exile. In our contemporary culture of mobility, this framework is now a universal motif for both individuals and countries alike. America, an exemplar, is a country of immigrants whose residents and citizens have roots in many countries throughout the world, while also forging connections with their adopted country. Their homeland becomes something that doesn’t truly exist in the physical; it becomes an amalgam of the cultures that make them. Mina Gallery is pleased to announce “Imaginary Homelands” curated by Sascha Crasnow, an exhibition that presents a particular group of artists that is bridging cultures—American-Israelis. Both the US and Israel are unique, in that their national identities were born of exile and assimilation. Each artist’s works reveal attempts to navigate “imaginary homelands”—formed from unique multifaceted backgrounds.

See Rushdie’s official website here.

 

 

 


New York

Emma Goldman, firebrand and icon

by · 11/01/11

Few people have managed to both witness and influence history like Emma Goldman. Her causes–anarchism, workers’ rights, and birth control, to name only a few–were as diverse as her influences, Nietzsche, Thoreau, Whitman. She experienced many of her century’s watershed moments: the Homestead Strike, the Bolshevik Revolution and the Spanish Civil War. Born in 1869, Goldman arrived in the United States in 1885, was deported in 1919, and devoted the rest of her life to dozens of causes until her death in 1940. Since then, Goldman’s image and writings have been invoked by the major social revolutions of the past fifty years.

Vivian Gornick, in a passionate and thoughtful essay for The Chronicle of Higher Education, explores how Goldman navigated the “distinct division between the anarchism of collective living and that of the individual.” In particular, Gornick focuses on Goldman’s insistence that “to feel transformed by sexual passion was to be in touch with the primeval at the heart of her politics.” For a more comprehensive look at Goldman’s legacy, check out Gornick’s book, Emma Goldman: Revolution as a Way of Life, published last month by Yale University Press.

 

Home Page | News | Tidbits

Samuel Beckett’s unexpected activism

by · 10/28/11

While Samuel Beckett’s characters are not necessarily known for their action and decisiveness, several newly published books reveal that Beckett himself was quite the activist, especially against the Nazi machine. Benjamin Ivry, writing in The Forward, considers the illuminating details of Beckett’s personal crusade against anti-Semitism and his involvement with the French Résistance, as depicted in Samuel Beckett’s German Diaries 1936–1937, published by Cotinuum this past June, and The Letters of Samuel Beckett: Volume 2, 1941–1956, recently released by Cambridge University Press. Did Beckett identify with Jews because of his friendships with Jewish artists from across Europe, along with his experiences as an Irish writer in exile? Was his anti-Nazi fervor a reaction to the Third Reich’s hatred of otherness? Together, Ivry writes, these two books give a “fuller understanding of Beckett’s motivation for his pro-Jewish and anti-Nazi activism,” and also “underline how profound Beckett’s ties were with the Jewish people.”

New York | Cities | Home Page | News | Tidbits

Shining the lantern on Emma Lazarus

by · 10/28/11

Emma Lazarus’ “The New Colossus” may be the most famous text affixed to an American monument, and certainly one of the most evocative poems about immigration, yet Lazarus herself has always remained a bit elusive. In 2006, a comprehensive biography by Esther Schor, professor of English at Princeton, brought the brief but vibrant life of Emma Lazarus–a native New Yorker whose Sephardic ancestors helped settle the thirteen colonies–into focus. Now, just in time for the 125th anniversary of the Statue of Liberty’s official dedication, Schor has teamed up with Nextbook Press to create an interactive online version of Lazarus’ poem.

Besides being an entertaining feat of multimedia craftsmanship, Schor’s annotations provide fascinating bits of relevant miscellanea; for example, did you know that the face of Lady Liberty was modeled after the mother of Frédéric Bartholdi, the statue’s designer? Also, Schor reveals, Emma Lazarus not only wrote about the “huddled masses yearning to breathe free,” she helped teach Russian Jewish immigrants English and wrote exposés about their inhumane living conditions.

For more on the legacy of Emma Lazarus, take a look at a recent New York Times article, which includes a copy of Lazarus’ seminal work written in her own hand.

Fiction | Home Page | News | Tidbits

Appelfeld contemplates escape

by · 10/18/11

“There are no words in my mouth,” realizes Blanca Hammer, the heroine of Until the Dawn’s Light, the latest work by acclaimed Israeli novelist Aharon Appelfeld. A life full of tragedy has taken its toll on Blanca, and the novel finds her criss-crossing Europe by train in the 1910s with Otto, her four-year-old son. What exactly is Blanca escaping from and where is she headed? Appelfeld answers such questions only partially, but two recent reviews of the book offer some fascinating insight.

Hailing the book as “masterful,” Julie Orringer—author of The Invisible Bridgewrites in the New York Times that Appelfeld “captures a larger sense of longing for a Jewish homeland,” and that, through Blanca and Otto’s wanderings, the reader feels “the losses of an entire nation, and the terrible cost of its triumphs.”

Shoshana Olidort, in her review for the Forward, considers the weight of Appelfeld’s own life on his characters. “One senses that Appelfeld is not mining his imagination to concoct tragic stories,” she writes. “Rather, he is simply telling and retelling the story of his life as a child survivor of the Holocaust.”

Home Page | Tidbits

A rational chat with Rebecca Goldstein

by · 10/11/11

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, the author of Betraying Spinoza: The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity and Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox of Kurt Gödel, as well as the 2010 novel Thirty-Six Arguments for the Existence of God: A Work of Fiction, is a National Jewish Book Award winner and a MacArthur Foundation “genius” grantee. Recently, the Harvard research associate and Westchester native sat down with Rationally Speaking, the blog wing of New York City Skeptics, a non-profit promoting “critical thinking, skeptical inquiry, and science education among the general public.” Goldstein spoke at length with co-bloggers Julia Galef and Massimo Pigliucci about engaging with “Spinoza’s God” and the danger of ideologies, among other fascinating topics.

To learn more about Goldstein, check out her website.

 

New York | Cities | Home Page | Memoir | Tidbits

The confessions of Alfred Kazin

by · 10/11/11

“I’m so tired of being told my writing is ‘moving.’ I want to be told it is convincing.”

This is only one of the myriad confessions and frustrations from the literary critic and memoirist Alfred Kazin now available to the reading public. An estimated 7,000 pages of entries spanning more than fifty years has been pruned to a comparatively-slim, 598-page volume–Alfred Kazin’s Journals, edited by Richard M. Cook and published last spring by Yale University Press.

Kazin (1915-1998) grew up in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and is best known for his memoirs, A Walker in the City, Starting Out in the Thirties and New York Jew, as well as for his works of literary criticism, namely On Native Grounds. Kazin’s Journals offer an insight into his “neurotic postures” and “private unhappiness,” which often went unexplored in his better-known works, Vivian Gornick argues in a recent article in Boston Review. Case-in-point, according to Gornick, is this entry from 1986:

“I shiver when I read day after day of my journal and come across the same anger, the same unappeasability, the same heart, the same, the same unrest and anxiety…a hungry soul, often a bitter soul.”

The “richly unmediated expressiveness” of Alfred Kazin’s Journals, Gornick writes, reveals the “appalling nature of raw material untransformed by art.” For a second take on Journals, check out the New York Times review by Dwight Garner, who calls the book “easily one of the great diaries and moral documents of the past American century.”

Berlin

The Edge of the World

by · 10/11/11

James Polchin, a professor at NYU, recently wrote an article for The Smart Set titled World Views: From New York to Germany and Back Again. He begins the article with an excerpt from André Aciman’s essay “Shadow Cities,” a contemplation of exile. Aciman finds that New York acts as a stand in for memories of elsewhere—an exile’s quintessential condition and experience. As Aciman likens New York to a canvas on which memories of another time are projected, Polchin finds that the American-born German artist Lyonel Feininger did something similar in his own art.

Feininger was born in New York in 1871. At sixteen, he was sent to Germany to study music. He would not return to the United States for forty-nine years; in 1937, he and his Jewish wife left Germany. Feininger had good reason to feel unsafe in his homeland: soon after he fled back to his birth-city, some of his canvases were shown in the Nazi’s infamous show, “Degenerate Art.”

Polchin attended “Lyonel Feininger: At the Edge of the World,” a show of the artist’s works at the Whitney Museum of American Art in Manhattan. The title of the show reflects Feininger’s condition as an outsider in both his birth-country, the United States, and his chosen homeland, Germany. Polchin finds that the title “evokes the sense of exile, that powerful marginal space that granted Feininger (like most expats) freedom from the cultural demands of the adopted country and a broader space for creativity.” Read more »

Berlin | News

50th anniversary screening of ‘Judgment at Nuremberg’

by · 10/11/11

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science will screen Stanley Kramer’s film “Judgment at Nuremberg,” fifty years after its world premier, on Tuesday, October 11 at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.

In Suzan King’s article for the Los Angeles Times, Ellen Harrington, programmer at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, says:

“it had been only 16 years since the end of World War II and 14 years since the trials had taken place when Kramer decided to premiere the film in Germany in the face of people who had been complicit and lived through the war. He was not just making a movie for the rest of the world, he was making this movie to show to Germans. This is a film that really for its time was incredibly daring. It was not something that other filmmakers were interesting in tackling in terms of looking at the citizens of Germany and the nonmilitary component of Germany and the judicial structure and how they were complicit in enforcing all of these policies.”

Karen Kramer, widow of Stanley Kramer, recalls:

“The German people quietly filed out of the theater after the film. It didn’t play [in Germany] for two years after that premiere. They took it hard. The German people didn’t like what they saw. It was a very right thing and a very brave thing for Stanley to do. Nobody wanted to make it. People asked him, ‘Nobody wants to see this movie. Did you have family in the Holocaust?’ He said, ‘No, I didn’t, but I’m Jewish so I guess that makes it personal enough for me.’”

The film was nominated for 10 Academy Awards, and won for Abby Mann’s screenplay and lead actor Maximilian Schell. The cast of the film included several stars, as Richard Widmark, Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich,Judy Garland, Montgomery Clift, and others.

News | Poetry

T.S. Eliot and antisemitism, continued…

by · 10/11/11

The Yale University Press recently published two volumes of letters written byT.S. Eliot. The letters were originally released in 1988 by Penguin. Below is a description of the nine-hundred page, two-volume set:

Volume One: 1898–1922 presents some 1,400 letters encompassing the years of Eliot’s childhood in St. Louis, Missouri, through 1922, by which time the poet had settled in England, married his first wife, and published The Waste Land.

Volume Two: 1923–1925 covers the early years of Eliot’s editorship of The Criterion, publication of The Hollow Men, and his developing thought about poetry and poetics.

William Logan, an accomplished poet and literary critic, reviewed the collection for the New York Times in the Sunday Book Review. He titled the review “T.S. Eliot’s Rattle of Miseries,” referring not only to the poet’s slew of financial and personal problems but as well his inclinations towards racism, misogyny and antisemitism. Logan writes, “after a poet is dead, his letters are the windows to his soul — or perhaps just the cellar doors,” and so we, as readers, are granted an insight into Eliot’s private life as a struggling banker, husband, artist and modest literary maverick. Read more »