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Writing As Freedom, Writing As Testimony by Sergio Parussa
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Writing As Freedom, Writing As Testimony

Four Italian Writers and Judaism

Syracuse University Press · 2008-12-23

Writing As Freedom, Writing As Testimony: Four Italian Writers and Judaism

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Who It's For

  • Good for readers who enjoy Literary Criticism / Jewish
  • Good for readers interested in jewish

What You Get

  • Themes: Studies, Literary, Jewish.
  • Reading lane: Jewish and European.
  • Publisher: Syracuse University Press.

Categories

What we read

  • Literary Criticism / Jewish

    80%
  • Literary Criticism / European / Eastern

    75%
  • Religion / Judaism / History

    74%

About This Book

In Writing as Freedom, Writing as Testimony, Sergio Parussa explores the relationship between Judaism and writing in the works of four twentieth-century Italian writers: Umberto Saba, Natalia Ginzburg, Giorgio Bassani, and Primo Levi. Parussa examines the different ways in which each author’s work responds to Judaism and the notion of Jewish identity. With great detail, he shows how their writings reflect a change in attitude toward Judaism that occurred in Italian society b...

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In Writing as Freedom, Writing as Testimony, Sergio Parussa explores the relationship between Judaism and writing in the works of four twentieth-century Italian writers: Umberto Saba, Natalia Ginzburg, Giorgio Bassani, and Primo Levi. Parussa examines the different ways in which each author’s work responds to Judaism and the notion of Jewish identity. With great detail, he shows how their writings reflect a change in attitude toward Judaism that occurred in Italian society between the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, from a perception of Jewish identity as a constraint to one’s freedom to an understanding of it as a tool of intellectual freedom that can contribute to one’s sense of identity. For these authors, the recovery of Judaism consists not only of telling stories with Jewish subject matter but also of the repeated act of remembering, a process by which, as Parussa puts it, ?the past is salvaged from oblivion by means of its reactualization in the present.? Through memory, one becomes free to affirm difference and to make Jewish traditions an integral part of Italian culture.

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