Le choc de la création de l’État

The occasion of Ben-Gurion’s declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel on May 14, 1948, was one of the most exciting and moving moments in the long history of the Jewish people. This was a moment that the Jews had hoped for, yearned for, and prayed for throughout their two thousand yea...

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Main Author: Yigal Schwartz
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales 2009-12-01
Series:Yod
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/yod/325
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spelling doaj-4ceef6713a324ca286d548af8c8f90352020-11-25T01:10:18ZfraInstitut National des Langues et Civilisations OrientalesYod0338-93162261-02002009-12-0114133010.4000/yod.325Le choc de la création de l’ÉtatYigal SchwartzThe occasion of Ben-Gurion’s declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel on May 14, 1948, was one of the most exciting and moving moments in the long history of the Jewish people. This was a moment that the Jews had hoped for, yearned for, and prayed for throughout their two thousand years of exile. However, we should not understand from this that the declaration and the actual establishment of the Jewish State were not accompanied by difficulties and crises. Just the opposite is true. Ben-Gurion’s declaration and the establishment of the State created a chain of reactions and counter-reactions in the society and culture developing in Eretz Israel that can be characterized as post-traumatic. In this article, I will discuss the responses apparent in much Israeli fiction to the following phenomena: the traumatic passage from the “Yishuv society” to a state; the difficulty of coping simultaneously with renewed nationalism (which had already been dealt with in Europe) on the one hand and with modernism and postmodernism on the other; the unresolved struggle between the narrative of redemption and the narrative of the Diaspora and the complicated passage from a “melting pot” society to a multicultural one. In conclusion, I present the issues in a political context. I attempt to indicate the similar/different approaches of the authors of the Zionist left and the Zionist right to the practical implementation of the Zionist meta-narrative.http://journals.openedition.org/yod/325Israeli literatureZionismYishouvEretzMulticulturalismgeneration Palmah
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yigal Schwartz
spellingShingle Yigal Schwartz
Le choc de la création de l’État
Yod
Israeli literature
Zionism
Yishouv
Eretz
Multiculturalism
generation Palmah
author_facet Yigal Schwartz
author_sort Yigal Schwartz
title Le choc de la création de l’État
title_short Le choc de la création de l’État
title_full Le choc de la création de l’État
title_fullStr Le choc de la création de l’État
title_full_unstemmed Le choc de la création de l’État
title_sort le choc de la création de l’état
publisher Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales
series Yod
issn 0338-9316
2261-0200
publishDate 2009-12-01
description The occasion of Ben-Gurion’s declaration of the establishment of the State of Israel on May 14, 1948, was one of the most exciting and moving moments in the long history of the Jewish people. This was a moment that the Jews had hoped for, yearned for, and prayed for throughout their two thousand years of exile. However, we should not understand from this that the declaration and the actual establishment of the Jewish State were not accompanied by difficulties and crises. Just the opposite is true. Ben-Gurion’s declaration and the establishment of the State created a chain of reactions and counter-reactions in the society and culture developing in Eretz Israel that can be characterized as post-traumatic. In this article, I will discuss the responses apparent in much Israeli fiction to the following phenomena: the traumatic passage from the “Yishuv society” to a state; the difficulty of coping simultaneously with renewed nationalism (which had already been dealt with in Europe) on the one hand and with modernism and postmodernism on the other; the unresolved struggle between the narrative of redemption and the narrative of the Diaspora and the complicated passage from a “melting pot” society to a multicultural one. In conclusion, I present the issues in a political context. I attempt to indicate the similar/different approaches of the authors of the Zionist left and the Zionist right to the practical implementation of the Zionist meta-narrative.
topic Israeli literature
Zionism
Yishouv
Eretz
Multiculturalism
generation Palmah
url http://journals.openedition.org/yod/325
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