Strangers in the Land: Blacks, Jews, Post-Holocaust America
Eric J. Sundquist, . . Harvard/Belknap, $35 (662pp) ISBN 978-0-674-01942-3
Sundquist's mammoth study is a deeply researched and illuminating hard look at how the often positive, often fraught relationship between American Jews and blacks has manifested itself in literature, historical writing, sociology and popular entertainment over the past 60 years. Sundquist's wide-ranging erudition is evident on every page; he's as apt at finding points of dialogue among Harlem Renaissance writings, popular sociology of the 1930s and the later fiction of Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin and Bruce Jay Friedman as he is at discussing "black responses to Nazism" in the writings of Zora Neale Hurston. His interpretations of this complicated material are nuanced and necessarily tentative. A professor of literature at UCLA, Sundquist is most engrossing when delving into a specific work, such as Bernard Malamud's
Reviewed on: 08/15/2005
Genre: Nonfiction
Other - 673 pages - 978-0-674-04414-2
Paperback - 672 pages - 978-0-674-03069-5