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Academic Year 2002/2003


Iconoclastic Fictions: Imagination and Idolatry in Recent Jewish American Writing
RELI 482 SP

This course will explore the connection, in self-consciously Jewish contemporary fiction, between the Judaic ban on idolatry and the intersections of ethics, power, and representation. The texts we will read pursue such an exploration in relation to questions of art and ethics, rationalism and faith, mimesis and technological reproduction, celebrity and identity, myth-making and cybernetic capabilities, among others. They all connect the Judaic critique of "idolatry" to the varied Jewish responses to fundamental issues of contemporary Jewish existence, such as the Holocaust, Zionism, and assimilation. They all thereby suggest that "Jewishness," rather than simply an ethnic identity, might provide ways of reading the dominant Enlightenment discourses, and of enhancing some of those discourses' liberating possibilities.

MAJOR READINGS

Raymond Federman, TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Ronald Sukenick, MOSAIC MAN
Cynthia Ozick, THE PUTTERMESSER PAPERS
Philip Roth, OPERATION SHYLOCK
Art Spiegelman, MAUS I AND II
Selected theoretical and critical essays on idolatry.

EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS

Five or six short response papers, final take home exam.

Unless preregistered students attend the first class meeting or communicate directly with the instructor prior to the first class, they will be dropped from the class list. NOTE: Students must still submit a completed Drop/Add form to the Registrar's Office.

COURSE FORMAT: Seminar

REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Level: UGRD    Credit: 1    Gen Ed Area Dept: HA RELI    Grading Mode: Graded   

Prerequisites: NONE

SECTION 01

Instructor(s): Katz,Adam   
Times: ..T.R.. 01:10PM-02:30PM;     Location: HALL84
Reserved Seats:    (Total Limit: 20)
SR. major: 3   Jr. major: 2
SR. non-major: 4   Jr. non-major: 4   SO: 4   FR: 3

Special Attributes:
Curricular Renewal:    Ethical Reasoning, Writing
Links to Web Resources For This Course.

Last Updated on MAR-18-2003


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