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Imagining The Kibbutz Visions Of Utopia In Literature And Film Ranen Omersherman

  • SKU: BELL-5423736
Imagining The Kibbutz Visions Of Utopia In Literature And Film Ranen Omersherman
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Imagining The Kibbutz Visions Of Utopia In Literature And Film Ranen Omersherman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Penn State University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 24.96 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Ranen Omer-Sherman
ISBN: 9780271065571, 0271065575
Language: English
Year: 2015

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Imagining The Kibbutz Visions Of Utopia In Literature And Film Ranen Omersherman by Ranen Omer-sherman 9780271065571, 0271065575 instant download after payment.

In Imagining the Kibbutz, Ranen Omer-Sherman explores the literary and cinematic representations of the socialist experiment that became history’s most successfully sustained communal enterprise. Inspired in part by the kibbutz movement’s recent commemoration of its centennial, this study responds to a significant gap in scholarship. Numerous sociological and economic studies have appeared, but no book-length study has ever addressed the tremendous range of critically imaginative portrayals of the kibbutz. This diachronic study addresses novels, short fiction, memoirs, and cinematic portrayals of the kibbutz by both kibbutz “insiders” (including those born and raised there, as well as those who joined the kibbutz as immigrants or migrants from the city) and “outsiders.” For these artists, the kibbutz is a crucial microcosm for understanding Israeli values and identity. The central drama explored in their works is the monumental tension between the individual and the collective, between individual aspiration and ideological rigor, between self-sacrifice and self-fulfillment. Portraying kibbutz life honestly demands retaining at least two oppositional things in mind at once—the absolute necessity of euphoric dreaming and the mellowing inevitability of disillusionment. As such, these artists’ imaginative witnessing of the fraught relation between the collective and the citizen-soldier is the story of Israel itself.

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