1999
DOI: 10.1017/s1060150399271124
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THEY THAT WALK IN DARKNESS”: GHETTO TRAGEDIES: THE USES OF CHRISTIANITY IN ISRAEL ZANGWILL’S FICTION

Abstract: AT THE END of the Victorian era and in the first decades of the twentieth century, Israel Zangwill was a well-known name in Europe, America, and even the Middle East. The enormous success of his 1892 novel Children of the Ghetto had made Zangwill the spokesperson for English Jewry throughout the world, as he revealed and explained an alien community to its non-Jewish neighbors and made the universe of the Jewish immigrants more intelligible to their acculturated coreligionists. An early Zionist, Zangwill met w… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist and Israel Zangwil's Dreamers of the Ghetto, which appear on the list of novels pertaining to Jewishness, were the only two novels on the list that have previously attracted sustained scholarly attention. For example, Udelson [33], Rochelson [28,29] and Murray [25] have all written on Zangwill, though he is far less well known to the public than Dickens.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist and Israel Zangwil's Dreamers of the Ghetto, which appear on the list of novels pertaining to Jewishness, were the only two novels on the list that have previously attracted sustained scholarly attention. For example, Udelson [33], Rochelson [28,29] and Murray [25] have all written on Zangwill, though he is far less well known to the public than Dickens.…”
Section: Discussion Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%