Israeli literature

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

State of Israel
Geography

Land of Israel · Districts · Cities
Transportation · Mediterranean
Dead Sea · Red Sea · Sea of Galilee
Jerusalem · Tel Aviv · Haifa

History

Jewish history · Timeline · Zionism · Aliyah
Herzl · Balfour · Mandate · 1947 UN Plan
Independence · Flag · Austerity · Refugees

Arab-Israeli conflict · Proposals

1948 War · 1949 Armistice · Suez War
Six-Day War · Attrition War
Yom Kippur War · Lebanon War
Israel-Lebanon conflict
Peace treaties with: Egypt, Jordan

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Timeline · Peace process · Peace camp
1st Intifada · Oslo · 2nd Intifada
Terrorism · Barrier · Disengagement

Economy

Science & technology · Companies
Tourism · Wine · Diamonds
Military industry

Demographics · Culture

Religion · Israeli Arabs · Kibbutz
Music · Archaeology · Universities
Hebrew · Literature · Sport · Israelis

Laws · Politics

Law of Return · Jerusalem Law
Parties · Elections · PM · President
Knesset · Supreme Court · Courts

Foreign affairs

Intl. Law · UN · US · Arab League

Security Forces

Israel Defense Forces
Intelligence Community · Security Council
Police · Border Police · Prison Service

Portal:Israel

This box: view  talk  edit

Israeli literature is the literature of the people or State of Israel.

It is mostly written in Hebrew and the history of Israeli literature is interesting because it is mostly the product of the revival of the Hebrew language as a spoken language in modern times.

Since the middle of the nineteenth century, the Hebrew language was increasingly used for speaking as well as writing modern forms of prose, poetry and drama.

By law, the Jewish National and University Library of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem receives two copies of each book published in Israel. In 2004 it reported that it received 6,436 new books. Most of them were published in Hebrew, and most of those books published in Hebrew were original to the Hebrew language. Almost 8% of the 2004 crop were children's books and another 4% were textbooks. According to the type of publisher, the books were 55% commercial, 14% self-published, 10% governmental, 7% educational, and 14% published by other types of organizations. [1]

Contents

[edit] History

The selection of authors mentioned here is according to the articles under References below. Quoted text is from the 2003 article except where indicated otherwise.

The first Modern Hebrew prose in the Land of Israel was written by "immigrant authors", for example:

  • Yosef Haim Brenner "saw flaws everywhere"; "favored the rabbinical and medieval forms of spoken Hebrew". Lived 1881-1921.
  • Shmuel Yosef Agnon addressed "major contemporary spiritual concerns"; loss of tradition, faith, and identity; "inner uncertainties"; tragedy and the grotesque. Lived 1888-1970.

[edit] The 1940s and 1950s

During the 1940s and 1950s: "the War of Independence Generation" (he:סופרי דור תש"ח). Native-born writers were conflicted "between individualism and commitment to society and state"; characterized by "social realism".


[edit] The 1960s

During the early 1960s: "Very influential" writers followed less "ideological patterns", and wrote more about the individual; "psychological realism, allegory and symbolism"; "speculation and skepticism regarding... conventions".

[edit] The 1980s and 1990s

During the 1980s and 1990s: "Intense literary activity", aimed at "enabling readers to understand themselves", characterized "three generations" of authors, including Oz, Yehoshua, Kaniuk, as well as:

[edit] About the Holocaust

The Holocaust was put in fresh perspective by Appelfeld and Grossman, as well as (among others):

[edit] New themes

New themes arose:

[edit] Women authors

Women authors became more prominent on "general topics", as well as women's role within "Jewish tradition and... in the Zionist enterprise":

[edit] Detective fiction

Some of the above women (Lapid and Gur) began writing detective fiction, as well as the following men and women:

[edit] The younger generation

A "younger generation" of authors that is "more universalistic", "alienated, surreal and idiosyncratic":

Some postmodernist writers:

[edit] Late 1990s

A new front of young authors active in the late 1990's and new millennium (see also [2])

[edit] Authors of children's books

Writing for children:

  • Uri Orlev
  • Yehuda Atlas (he:יהודה אטלס): set a trend of writing short poems from a child's perspective
  • Ephraim Sidon: satirical writer, often writing for adults under the guise of children's books
  • Nira Harel
  • Tamar Bergman
  • Gila Almagor: mostly autobiographical novels
  • Daniella Carmi
  • Devorah Omer (he:דבורה עומר): prolific writer for children and youth, awarded Israel Prize (2006)
  • Dorit Orgad: prolific writer for pre-teens and young adults
  • Michal Snunit: short illustrated books, allegories on spirituality and emotion, popular as gift books for adults
  • Alona Frankel (he:אלונה פרנקל): "Once Upon a Potty"
  • Galila Ron-Feder Amit: prolific writer for pre-teens and young adults
  • Smadar Shir: prolific writer for pre-teens and young adults

[edit] References

  • Furstenberg, Rochelle. "The State of the Arts: Israeli Literature." Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1998. [3],
  • Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, "CULTURE- Literature", 2003. [4]
  • Weill, Asher. "Culture in Israel- On the Cusp of the Millennium." Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 2000. [5].

[edit] See also