Self-sacrificing and/or Overbearing: the Jewish Mother in the Cultural Imagination
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Publication date: 28.08.2013
Scripta Judaica Cracoviensia, 2013, Volume 11, pp. 161 - 174
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843925SJ.13.014.1310Authors
Self-sacrificing and/or Overbearing: the Jewish Mother in the Cultural Imagination
Given the historical proximity of Polish and Jewish groups, it is possible to identify their mutual interconnectedness. This paper presents one such example of the stereotypical Jewish Mother, in Israel known as a “Polish woman,”both in its sociohistorical and cultural aspect. Drawing from the theory of gendered and stereotypical representations, author traces a changing portrayal of the Jewish Mother on her way from the ghetto penury to middle-class affluence. Embodied by popular characters such as Molly Goldberg, the Jewish mother also became a target of bitter criticism, best rendered in the depiction of Sophie Portnoy—the iconic protagonist of Philip Roth’s novel Portnoy’s Complaint (1967). Feminist re-readings of this popular stereotype offer an interesting insight into its construction and try to explain its viability.
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Information: Scripta Judaica Cracoviensia, 2013, Volume 11, pp. 161 - 174
Article type: Original article
Titles:
Self-sacrificing and/or Overbearing: the Jewish Mother in the Cultural Imagination
Self-sacrificing and/or Overbearing: the Jewish Mother in the Cultural Imagination
Koszalin University of Technology
Published at: 28.08.2013
Article status: Open
Licence: None
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