For the first time in over a century, this edition makes available
the work of the most important Jewish writer in early and
mid-Victorian Britain. Grace Aguilar (1816-1847) broke new literary
ground by writing from the unique perspective of an Anglo-Jewish
woman. Aguilar's writing responds to English representations of Jews
and women by writers such as Felicia Hemans, Maria Edgeworth, Sir
Walter Scott, and Thomas Macaulay. She both assimilates and alters the
genres of historical romance, dramatic monologue, domestic fiction,
history, and midrash, among others.
Selections of Aguilar's work in this Broadview edition include the
novella The Perez Family in its entirety; the Sephardic
historical romance "The Escape"; "History of the Jews in England," the
first such history ever written by a Jew; major poems originally
published in the American Jewish periodical The Occident;
excerpts from her text The Women of Israel; and
correspondence. This edition also includes primary source material
such as writings on "the Jewish question" (debates over Jews' status
in society) from Aguilar's non-Jewish contemporaries, tributes and
memoirs, and contemporary responses to her work.
Comments:
"This well-conceived edition makes an extraordinary contribution to
our understanding of Anglo-Jewish literature and culture in the early
Victorian era. Michael Galchinsky's introductions and notes (as well
as excellently chosen appended materials that in several cases reprint
long unavailable works by other writers) place Aguilar's writing in
its often overlapping Romantic, Victorian, and Jewish contexts to
restore an important voice to literary history." - Meri-Jane Rochelson,
Florida International University
"Michael Galchinsky's splendid edition of Grace Aguilar's work,
long out of print, revives the founder of Anglo-Jewish literature; the
significance of her novels, poems, histories, and theological work
cannot be overestimated. His rich and incisive introduction,
incorporating valuable original scholarship, examines Aguilar's
energetic warfare as an Anglo-Jewish woman writer in both
Anglo-Christian and Anglo-Jewish patriarchal worlds and sheds much new
light on the trans-Atlantic Jewish connection. Ancillary materials, as
well as expert notes, deftly shape out Aguilar's literary and
religious environment." - Daniel A. Harris, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick
"Making available the work of the first Anglo-Jewish woman writer,
this is a welcome and timely anthology. Michael Galchinsky's detailed
introduction provides an excellent account of the contexts in which
Grace Aguilar wrote, as a Sephardic Jew during the period of debates
about religious equality and religious reform and as a published woman
writer during the heyday of 'separate spheres' ideology. Aguilar's
writing on domestic womanhood and Jewish female education, her Jewish
historical fiction, and her religious poetry offer a fascinating
example of the appropriation and adaptation by a Jewish writer of
mainstream Victorian literary genres." - Nadia Valman, University of
Southampton, UK
Michael Galchinsky is an Assistant Professor of
English at Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA. He is the author of
The Origin of the Modern Jewish Woman Writer: Romance and Reform
in Victorian England (Wayne State UP, 1996).
Related Titles: Other works in the Broadview list
by 19th-century Jewish women writers (these American) are Infelicia
and Other Writings by Adah Isaacs Menken and Emma
Lazarus: Selected Poems and Other Writings.
Academics please note that this is a title
classified as having a restricted allocation of complimentary copies;
complimentary copies remain readily available to adopters and to
academics very likely to adopt this title in the coming academic year.
When adoption possibilities are less strong and/or further in the
future, academics are requested to purchase the title at an academic
discount, with the proviso that Broadview will happily refund the
purchase price (with or without a receipt) if the book is indeed
adopted.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Grace Aguilar: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
I. Fiction
"The Escape"
"The Perez Family"
"The Spirit of Night"
II. Poetry
"Sabbath Thoughts III"
"An Hour of Peace"
"A Poet's Dying Hymn"
"Song of the Spanish Jews, During their 'Golden Age'"
"A Vision of Jerusalem, While Listening to a Beautiful Organ in
one of the Gentile Shrines"
"The Address to the Ocean"
"The Hebrew's Appeal, On Occasion of the Late Fearful Ukase
Promulgated by the Emperor of Russia"
"Dialogue Stanzas"
"The Wanderers"
"The Rocks of Elim"
III. Non-Fiction Prose
from The Spirit of Judaism
[Our Hearts Must Breathe from Our Lips]
[The Bible as Foundation and Defense]
[The Hebrew's Neglect of the Bible]
[A Minority's Faith and Observance]
[Hints on the Religious Instruction of the Hebrew Youth]
[The Significance of the Hebrew Language]
[The Value of Profane History and Fiction]
[The Spirit and the Forms of Judaism Considered Separately and
Together]
from The Women of Israel
"Introduction"
"Sarah"
"Miriam"
"Deborah"
from The Jewish Faith
from Sabbath Thoughts and Sacred Communings
"Preface"
"Morning Meditation"
"Prayer for the Government of the Thoughts"
from "The Prophecies of Isaiah"
"History of the Jews in England"
Appendices:
A: Victorian Tributes
1. Testimonial from the Misses Levison and Isaacs
2. Abraham Benisch, Obituary
3. Isaac Leeser, Obituary
4. Athenaeum, Obituary
5. Tribute by the Ladies Of the Society for the Religious
Instruction Of Jewish Youth, Charleston
6. Marion Hartog, "Lines Written on the Death of Grace
Aguilar"
7. Anna Maria Hall, From "A Pilgrimage to the Grave of Grace
Aguilar"
8. Rebecca Gratz, Letters to Miriam Gratz Cohen
B: Victorian Criticism
1. Isaac Leeser, "Editor's Preface" to Spirit of Judaism
2. Jacob Franklin, Review of Spirit of Judaism from
Voice of Jacob
3. Review of The Women of Israel, from Athenaeum
4. Review of Home Influence, from Howitt's
Journal
5. Abraham Benisch, Review of Imrei Lev, from
Jewish Chronicle
6. Sarah Aguilar, Correspondence with Miriam and Solomon Cohen
on Sabbath Thoughts and Sacred
Communings
C: Romantic and Victorian Reflections on "The Jewish Question"
1. George Gordon, Lord Byron, "Jephthah's Daughter" (1815)
2. Walter Scott, from Ivanhoe (1819)
3. William Wordsworth, "The Jewish Family" (1828)
4. Thomas Babington Macaulay, from "Speech on Jewish
Disabilities" (1831)
5. Sarah Stickney Ellis, from Women of England
(1838)
6. Felicia Hemans, "The Song of Miriam" (1839)
D: Victorian Jewish Writers
1. Morris Raphall, "The Sun and the Moon" (1834)
2. Marion and Celia Moss, from Early Efforts (1839)
3. Abraham Benisch, "Our Women" (1861)
E: Aguilar's Frankfurt Journal
Select Bibliography
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