2022
DOI: 10.3138/seminar.58.4.4
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Worldliness, Jewish Purpose, and the Non-Jewish Jewish Narrator in Olga Grjasnowa’sDer verlorene Sohn(2020)

Abstract: The worldliness that characterizes the literary fiction of the self-identified Jewish writer Olga Grjasnowa can be understood as an expression of “Jewish purpose” (Adam Sutcliffe), entailing solidarity with other persecuted minorities rooted in the Jewish experience, and especially Jewish suffering. This article focuses on Grjasnowa’s Der verlorene Sohn, in which a Muslim child is taken from his family and brought to St. Petersburg. The article explores the depiction of Islamophobia in Imperial Russia and how … Show more

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