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’The Trump Era is Here, and I Finally Feel at Home‘ – Sayed Kashua in Illinois
Author(s) -
Shiri Goren
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
’iẇniym betqẇmat yiśraʼel
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0792-7169
DOI - 10.51854/bguy-36a126
Subject(s) - audience measurement , hebrew , newspaper , privilege (computing) , punctuation , history , white (mutation) , persona , residence , media studies , literature , law , sociology , political science , classics , art , humanities , philosophy , demography , linguistics , gene , biochemistry , chemistry
In early July 2014, the Israeli-Palestinian author Sayed Kashua declared in his popular Hebrew column in the Ha’aretz newspaper that he is done with Jerusalem, that he has moved to the United States for good and is never coming back. Despite this emotional statement and his decision to give up on Israel, Kashua continued to write his popular weekly column for over three years mostly from his new place of residence in the midwestern city of Champaign, in Illinois, a location vastly different from the Jerusalem he left behind. Using theories of migration and transnational writing to examine Kashua’s non-fictional Hebrew and English works during this period I argue that there is tension between the character Kashua assumes for his Israeli readership and the one he assumes when writing for an American audience. These fictional personae relate differently to the move to the US and the possibility of returning to Israel. Moreover, Kashuua’s Israeli persona continues to write from a minority position whereas his American counterpart, despite concerted efforts, cannot avoid identifying with white privilege. The article then traces the dissolution of Kashua’s dual personae to his decision in November 2017 to stop writing the weekly column.

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