
Writing in a World of Strangers The Invention of Jewish Literature Revisited
Author(s) -
Dinah Wouters
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of latin cosmopolitanism and european literatures
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2593-743X
DOI - 10.21825/jolcel.81968
Subject(s) - dialectic , judaism , hegelianism , metaphor , emancipation , aesthetics , literature , sociology , philosophy , epistemology , art , linguistics , political science , theology , politics , law
The Jewish struggle for admission into the European canon puts a spotlight on precisely those tensions within cosmopolitan literature that are debated in contemporary scholarship: the continuum between unity and multiplicity, the nature of intersectionality and the (im)possibility of cosmopolitan aesthetics, always against the background of persistent foundational notions (this is typically German/Jewish/…) and the dialectic of inclusion and exclusion that these notions trigger. This article demonstrates how in the shadow of Goethe’s Weltliteratur the nineteenth-century Jewish philologists developed a parallel programme with, hardly surprising, eine schöne Rolle for Jewish literature. In this paper, I would like to briefly introduce that programme, specify the role played by Jewish literature, and draw out some lessons for the current attempt at creating an inclusive, egalitarian canon.