'Dark Heart(s)'.Family Secrets and Hidden Selves in the Work of Charlotte Mendelson
€47.95
(inklusive MwSt.)
Verfügbarkeit: Titel wird für Sie produziert, Festbezug, bitte vormerken
Zusatztext
Master's Thesis from the year 2015 in the subject Didactics for the subject English - Literature, Works, grade: 1,7, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (DEL), course: British Studies, language: English, abstract: An analysis of genesis of Mendelson's writing with particular focus on her British-Jewish background. So far, the British-Jewish novelist Charlotte Mendelson has published four books, namely "Love in Idleness" (2001), "Daughters of Jerusalem" (2003), "When We Were Bad" (2007), and "Almost English" (2013), which could all be typified as intercultural coming-of-age novels. The main source of inspiration appears to be Mendelsons own multi-ethnic background. - She was born in London in 1972 and grew up in St Johns College, Oxford, where her father taught public international law. But even though she is English-born and has a Cockney grandfather, Mendelson identifies herself as not in the least English since her paternal grandmother stemmed from Latvia and Poland (qtd. in Westbrook) and her maternal grandparents were Hungarian-speaking-Czech, Ruthenian for about 10 minutes [and also somewhat] Carpathian mountainy (qtd. in Edemariam) and came to England with the last train out of Prague (Mendelson) fleeing from the Nazis as Jewish refugees (cf. Mendelson). Especially her maternal grandparents are a lasting inspiration for Mendelson. Her Hungarian side is the side [she] like[s] showing off the most (qtd. in Westbrook) and is repeatedly referred to in interviews. Her hybrid background has enabled [Mendelson] to become an essentially diasporic writer (Cheyette, Diaspora and Multiculturalism 54) When reading Mendelsons novels in chronological order, it seems as if her writing has undergone some development. Recurring topics and tropes, such as living in a supposedly cryptic family microcosm and the difficulties of finding ones identity in circumstances that resemble exile, are condensed, deepened, and shaped into more complex versions. Hence, her work seems to display a form of literary genesis with the latest publication, the Booker-nominated AE, the climax of Mendelsons oeuvre so far. True to the notion that a Jewish writer is not necessarily one who charters the word Jew in his writings, but the one for whom the word Jew is contained in all the words of the dictionary (Jabés qtd. in Brauner 185), Mendelson repeatedly uses themes which are very characteristic in Jewish writing, including problems in identity formation, feeling left out and suffering from unspoken truths about the experiences of ancestors (related to the Holocaust).
Weitere Details
Erschienen: 18.02.2015
Umfang: 84 S.
Sprache: ENG
Einband: KT
Format: 0.7 x 21 x 14.8 cm
ISBN/EAN: 9783656899549
Umbreit-Nr.: 7873391
