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Cather’s representation of this Jewish character is deeply marked by an ambivalence that Susan Meyer
shown as being at work in the representation of Louie in The Professor’s House.The Palmers were not Jewish
Nathanmeyer Jewish.
in Thea’s fate” (8) and concludes her longer reading of “The Diamond Mine” by suggesting that the Jewish
turn of mind in his family to a particular place, however, but rather to a person: Louie, who is Jewish
relationship to place through themes of diaspora and exile.Howard Wettstein explains that, especially from a Jewish
occurs in 1876, and by 1881 the term was used by Encyclopaedia Britannica to refer specifically to Jewish
Diasporas and Exiles: Varieties of Jewish Identity. Ed. Howard Wettstein.
For example, the third-person narrator uses Jewish stereotypes to describe Becky: she is “a thin, tense-faced
Despite the stock Jewish stereotypes Cather deploys, she also creates in Becky and Rena two sympathetic
New waves of immigrants from southern and eastern Europe—Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish rather than the
In “Scandal,” Siegmund Stein, a Jewish “department store millionaire,” attempts to fool the public by
Both “Scandal” and “Ardessa” contain uncomfortable stereotypes of Jewish characters.11 And the portrait
“Willa Cather and the Geography of Jewishness.”