New Reflections on Primo Levi : Before and After Auschwitz - Risa Sodi

New Reflections on Primo Levi

Before and After Auschwitz

By: Risa Sodi (Editor), Millicent Marcus (Editor)

Hardcover | 1 June 2011 | Edition Number 1

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Primo Levi’s hold on scholarly, critical and public attention grows with the passing of time.  He commands a position of prominence in discourses ranging across the disciplines of Holocaust studies, Jewish studies, Italian literature, politics, history and philosophy.  Certain of his concepts (the “grey zone”) or certain concepts popularized through his works (the Musulmann phenomenon) play a significant role in contemporary intellectual discourse.  In addition, Levi’s reflections on the act and the possibility of witness, and of recounting trauma, are increasingly cited by a range of thinkers.

This book presents a baker’s dozen of interpretative keys to Levi’s output and thought.  It deepens our understanding of common themes in Levi studies (memory and witness) while exploring unusual and revealing byways (Levi and Calvino, or Levi and theater, for example).  Of special interest and utility are the chapters that situate his thought within wider contexts: his epistemological connection to ancient Greeks, and his contributions to Holocaust phenomenology.

Industry Reviews

"Critical study of Levi has surged recently, and this is a fine addition to that literature. Sodi and Marcus (both, Italian,

Yale) have assembled an international group of prominent and emerging scholars of Italian, Holocaust, and Levi

literary studies. The primary obstacles to early dissemination of Levi's Survival in Auschwitz were the belief, on the

part of leading publishers, that the Holocaust could not be assimilated into conventional literary genre studies and the

early postwar repression of Italian Holocaust history to pursue the anti-Fascist narrative. Levi is credited with the

eventual Italian escalation of interest in Holocaust literary production and scholarship. Among the collection's best

essays are those that treat Levi's politics and involvement in anti-Fascist groups; his predeportation identity based on a

theory of "parallel nationalization," whereby Italianization was privileged over Jewish identity; and shifting Italian

Holocaust memory from 1958 (with the republication of Survival in Auschwitz) to 1963 (publication of The

Reawakening) and its subsequent decline. Other essays explore Freudian trauma theory in The Reawakening, Levi

and Italo Calvino, literariness of the Survival in Auschwitz canto section, and Levi's attitude toward Muselmanner.

One essay provides a questionable reading of If Not Now, When? through the lens of the American Western film

genre." - Choice

"It is usually said that the life of a writer is a life of the mind. Primo Levi is an exception: he wrote his masterpieces because he was acquainted with grief. The essays in this volume grasp this essential trait of his writings and acknowledge that they cannot be simply classified as contributions to the intellectual history of recent times. With extraordinary precision, all of them, together, open the door to the moral center of the writer's lived experience, to his unique art, and to the most profound oftragedies of the twentieth century." - Giuseppe Mazzotta, Sterling Professor in the Humanities for Italian, Yale University, and author of Dante's Vision and the Circle of Knowledge

"In their diverse ways, these essays testify to what by now should be irrefutably clear: Primo Levi was one of the most important writers of the past half-century. The brilliance of his achievement is clarified in the critical studies of this learned and engaging book." - Alvin H. Rosenfeld, Professor of English and Jewish Studies at Indiana University and author of A Double Dying: Reflections on Holocaust Literature and The End of the Holocaust

"An indispensable, wide-ranging collection of essays on a great writer and memorialist. Contributors analyze in depth not only his literary legacy but also his belated recognition as a world-class author, his relation to the Italian Jewish community, and Italy's 'cultural reticence' in dealing with the Holocaust." - Geoffrey Hartman, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Emeritus, Yale University, author of The Longest Shadow: In the Aftermath of the Holocaust

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