"One Day Our Warmest Friend; the Next Our Bitterest Enemy": Mordecai Manuel Noah and the Black-Jewish Imaginary

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Jacob Crane
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:This article explores the often contentious relationship between early American Jewish writer Mordecai Manuel Noah and the African American community in 1820s New York City. I argue that recent critical discussions of Noah's contributions to Jewish American literature have neglected to confront the author's racist attacks against the city's free black population. However, rather than asking the obvious and perhaps unanswerable question of whether Noah's racism overshadows his Jewish activism, I pursue a different question: what did Noah's Jewishness mean to the African Americans he engaged with? In developing this question I examine how Noah's complicated relationship with the African American community actually gave rise to a vibrant discourse that compared the roles of Jewish and African identities in antebellum America. I argue that reckoning with this complex relationship offers us the opportunity to interrogate not only the shifting meanings of whiteness and Jewishness in the period but also the metaphors of "doubleness" that pervade models of minority identity and readings of both Jewish American and African American literature.
“有一天,我们最温暖的朋友;《下一个我们最大的敌人》:莫迪凯·曼努埃尔·诺亚和黑人-犹太人的想象
摘要:本文探讨了19世纪20年代美国早期犹太作家莫迪凯·曼努埃尔·诺亚与纽约市非裔美国人社区之间经常引起争议的关系。我认为,最近关于诺亚对美国犹太文学贡献的批评性讨论忽视了作者对该市自由黑人的种族主义攻击。然而,与其问诺亚的种族主义是否掩盖了他的犹太行动主义这个显而易见、或许无法回答的问题,我更想问一个不同的问题:诺亚的犹太身份对他交往的非裔美国人意味着什么?在发展这个问题的过程中,我研究了诺亚与非裔美国人社区的复杂关系实际上是如何引发了一种充满活力的话语,这种话语比较了战前美国犹太人和非洲人身份的角色。我认为,考虑到这种复杂的关系,不仅为我们提供了一个机会,让我们可以审视那个时期白人和犹太人的含义变化,还可以审视“双重性”的隐喻,这种隐喻普遍存在于少数民族身份的模式中,也存在于犹太裔美国人和非裔美国人的文学作品中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
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