Skip to product information
1 of 1

Being For Myself Alone

Regular price $90.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $90.00
Sold out
This is a work of unprecedented scope, tracing the origins of Jewish autobiographical writing from the early modern period to the early twentieth century. Drawing on a multitude of Hebrew and Yiddi...
Read More
  • 13 June 2005
View Product Details

This is a work of unprecedented scope, tracing the origins of Jewish autobiographical writing from the early modern period to the early twentieth century. Drawing on a multitude of Hebrew and Yiddish texts, very few of which have been translated into English, and on contemporary autobiographical theory, this book provides a literary/historical explanatory paradigm for the emergence of the Jewish autobiographical voice. The book also provides the English reader with an introduction to the works of central figures in the history of Hebrew and Yiddish literature, and it includes discussion of material that has never been submitted to literary critical analysis in English.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $90.00
Pages: 672
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture
Publication Date: 13 June 2005
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804751575
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
"This is one of the most ambitious and accomplished first books I have read in some time. Marcus Moseley correctly assesses the importance of the emergence of the autobiography as a prime--though neglected--cultural index of the modernization of the Jews of Eastern Europe, and he conducts a thorough investigation of the presuppositions and implications of this assessment. . . . Throughout, one is aware of the presence of a guiding critical intelligence of a high order. . . . The book is illuminating for the reader interested in either Jewish studies or modern cultural history."—Arnold Band, University of California, Los Angeles

"Marcus Moseley's Being for Myself Alone is truly engrossing. The erudition, the astonishing range of material examined and the unusual intensity of the argument combine to make the reading of this book a rare intellectual pleasure. At one level, it is novelistic, introducing us to a remarkable number of fascinating and often bizarre individuals; while at another, it is an extended and highly sophisticated scholarly essay on the theory of autobiography. What a rewarding work this is for anybody interested in the history and culture of the Jews over the last few centuries, particularly in Eastern Europe."—Jonathan Frankel, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

"Marcus Moseley's study of the emergence of the autobiographical genre among Jews is a sprawling, original, and enormously erudite tour of three centuries of literary and intellectual history the impact of Being for Myself Alone on the study of Jewish autobiography can scarcely be overstated. Marcus Moseley makes a vast cultural landscape come alive, transforming not just what we are able to see, but how we see it." - Biography
Marcus Moseley is Associate Professor of German and Jewish Studies at Northwestern University and has taught Hebrew and Yiddish Literature at New York University, Harvard University, and Johns Hopkins University.