TY - JOUR
T1 - Avot Yeshurun’s self-commentary
AU - Gluzman, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Throughout his literary career, which spanned over sixty years, Avot Yeshurun responded to readers’ dismay at his poems’ hermeticism by attempting to explain the logic of his writing. Although critics never fail to mention the difficulty of Yeshurun’s poetic language, his self-exegetic texts, which often appeared as paratexts in his volumes of poetry, have gone largely ignored. This essay reads Yeshurun’s self-commentary as a fundamental tenet of his writing and as a crucial aspect of his poetic address. While this self-commentary is at times hermetic in itself, it embodies the tension between Yeshurun’s pursuit of self-knowledge and the ineffable nature of his inner world. Yeshurun’s exceptionally difficult poetic language, and especially his use of the enigmatic word “yahndes,” which provoked critics’ ire upon its first appearance in 1952, will be read in two discursive contexts: Roman Jakobson’s “Linguistics and Poetics” and W.R. Bion’s “Attacks on Linking.” While both Jakobson’s and Bion’s formulation may shed light on the fractured communication between Yeshurun and his readers, his self-commentary may be viewed as attempts to reach out and mend this rift.
AB - Throughout his literary career, which spanned over sixty years, Avot Yeshurun responded to readers’ dismay at his poems’ hermeticism by attempting to explain the logic of his writing. Although critics never fail to mention the difficulty of Yeshurun’s poetic language, his self-exegetic texts, which often appeared as paratexts in his volumes of poetry, have gone largely ignored. This essay reads Yeshurun’s self-commentary as a fundamental tenet of his writing and as a crucial aspect of his poetic address. While this self-commentary is at times hermetic in itself, it embodies the tension between Yeshurun’s pursuit of self-knowledge and the ineffable nature of his inner world. Yeshurun’s exceptionally difficult poetic language, and especially his use of the enigmatic word “yahndes,” which provoked critics’ ire upon its first appearance in 1952, will be read in two discursive contexts: Roman Jakobson’s “Linguistics and Poetics” and W.R. Bion’s “Attacks on Linking.” While both Jakobson’s and Bion’s formulation may shed light on the fractured communication between Yeshurun and his readers, his self-commentary may be viewed as attempts to reach out and mend this rift.
KW - Avot Yeshurun
KW - Hebrew poetry
KW - hermetic poetry
KW - paratext
KW - psychoanalysis
KW - self-commentary
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099046642&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14725886.2020.1863562
DO - 10.1080/14725886.2020.1863562
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AN - SCOPUS:85099046642
SN - 1472-5886
VL - 21
SP - 99
EP - 121
JO - Journal of Modern Jewish Studies
JF - Journal of Modern Jewish Studies
IS - 1
ER -