top of page
IMG_0047.jpeg

“Roth's fiction, Kaplan brilliantly argues, exposes an essential contradiction in contemporary Jewish moral life, often displaced into his representations of race, gender, and sexuality.” 

- Debra Shostak

Available Now:

Jewish Anxiety and the Novels of Philip Roth (Bloomsbury, 2015) argues that Jewish anxiety stems not only from fear of victimization but also from fear of perpetration. Most of Roth’s novels scrutinize perpetration and victimization through featuring racist, ranting characters who express anti-black-American or anti-Japanese sentiment; progressive figures who explicitly challenge this racism often oppose these characters. Because copious numbers of Roth’s Jewish men try (but fail) to identify with some of these characters, an endlessly deferred alliance appears as a spectral presence that conjures up shared oppression that will always be dissolved by white privilege. By placing Jewish identification with usually black characters in proximity to (often Jewish) racist ranting Roth subtly demonstrates the danger of Jews becoming the very thing the aftershock of the Holocaust would make them despise most: racist.

“In Jewish Anxiety and the Novels of Philip Roth, Brett Kaplan offers a timely reassessment of the notion of 'Jewish anxiety.' Roth's fiction, Kaplan brilliantly argues, exposes an essential contradiction in contemporary Jewish moral life, often displaced into his representations of race, gender, and sexuality. By moving beyond the conventional account of how Roth returns to the mid-century past-how the Jews Roth writes about are driven by fear that anti-Semitism may again victimize Jews as the millions were in the Holocaust-Kaplan engages Roth in ongoing history. She uncovers in his fiction an antithetical anxiety among Jews who confront how Jewish actions during the Israel-Palestine conflict may victimize others. Kaplan's exceptional historical insight enables her to discern in the politics of Roth's novels the manifold ways in which the contemporary Jew may experience moral ambivalence. Kaplan's book will change the way that readers think about Roth and the Jews.” –  Debra Shostak, Mildred Foss Thompson Professor of English Language and Literature, The College of Wooster, USA

​

“This is a perceptive, perspicacious, and provocative book that offers fresh, persuasive readings of many of Roth's key works. Kaplan has read widely and thought carefully about the tensions that animate Roth's work and her study will be very valuable to both scholars and students.” –  David Brauner, Professor of Contemporary Literature, The University of Reading, UK

​

“This engaging study of dual anxiety in Roth's work – linked to victimization and perpetration -- breaks new ground in its analysis of his fiction. Widening the complex nature of anxiety and linking it to race and history, Kaplan successfully shows Roth's strategies in facing the complex double bind of his characters.” –  Ira B. Nadel, Professor of English, University of British Columbia, Canada

​

“Jewish Anxiety and the Novels of Philip Roth suggests that Roth's oeuvre shows the urgency needed to examine central social and cultural concerns such as race, gender, capitalism, terrorism, and genocide. These universal problems are tied up with unique individuals wrestling with overwhelming anxiety of victimhood and perpetration. … How does Kaplan relate remembering to the heroism of Roth's characters that is expressed in almost psychotic rebelliousness against moving on? Does wrestling with the self and with acculturation create an option to remember and usher in a new form of historical relevance and responsibility? In relation to The Human Stain, Kaplan specifically writes that Roth develops a bleak vision and according to it our belonging to the world is disclosed by the stain: 'there is no hope for redemption or reconciliation. Roth thus demonstrates how we are all stained with the blood of our past and with the immobility of that past.” –  Philip Roth Studies

Brett Ashley Kaplan

bottom of page