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Mourning a Father Lost: A Kibbutz Childhood Remembered

Autor Avraham Balaban
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 noi 2003
Returning to the kibbutz of his childhood to attend his father's funeral, Avraham Balaban confronts his buried yet still intensely painful childhood memories. Comparing the kibbutz of today with that of his early years, the author weaves together two interrelated stories: a sensitive artist growing up in the intensely pragmatic world of Kibbutz Huldah and the rise and fall of a grand yet failed social experiment. As he moves through the seven days of sitting shivah for his father, Balaban experiences an expanding cycle of mourning-for self, family, the kibbutz, and Israel itself. With a poet's keen voice, Balaban pens a poignant, frank portrait of the emotional damage wrought by the kibbutz educational system, which separated children from their parents, hoping to establish a new kind of family, a nonbiological family. Indeed, he realizes that he is mourning not the physical death of his father, but the much earlier death of the father-child bond. Only the unwavering love of his remarkable mother rescued him. Readers will see the kibbutz movement, and Israel in general, with new eyes after finishing this book. In the process of unearthing his earliest memories, Balaban meditates on the mechanism of memory and the forces that shape it. Thus, he examines the varied layers-familial, societal, and national-that establish individual identity. During the shivah, he discovers the tremendous power of words in shaping one's world, on the one hand, and their redemptive power on the other.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780742529229
ISBN-10: 0742529223
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 150 x 229 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.29 kg
Ediția:0176
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Child of a Dream, Child of a Laboratory
Part 2 Ten Opening Data
Chapter 3 Broken Skies
Chapter 4 Remembering a Lack
Chapter 5 A Moment's Silence, Please
Chapter 6 What Did You Learn in Kindergarten Today?
Chapter 7 Gordonia Hulda
Chapter 8 Four Eyes, Two Mouths
Chapter 9 Crowding
Chapter 10 Cultivators
Chapter 11 Death in a Clown's Cap
Chapter 12 Observing Hands-Possible Memories: A Note on First-Person Narratives
Part 13 Words
Chapter 14 Pampered Children-Nehemiah
Chapter 15 A Decent Society
Chapter 16 Words
Chapter 17 A Lost War
Chapter 18 A Wet Icicle
Chapter 19 What Memory Recalls
Chapter 20 Blue Bruises on the Flesh: Openings on Life
Chapter 21 Pampered Children-Yossi
Chapter 22 Singing and Weeping: Early Training
Chapter 23 Pampered Children
Chapter 24 Crowding: Hairstyles from Overseas
Chapter 25 Pampered Children-Shlomo
Chapter 26 Pampered Children: Sex is Little Moments of Love
Chapter 27 Pampered Children-Batsheva
Chapter 28 Singing and Crying: Homeland Songs
Chapter 29 Coffee
Chapter 30 A Dream
Chapter 31 Parting
Part 32 Completions
Chapter 33 The Return Home
Chapter 34 Early Days
Chapter 35 Birth
Chapter 36 What Have They Done to You?
Chapter 37 A Miss
Chapter 38 Laboratory Child, Laboratory Mother
Chapter 39 Days of Crisis
Chapter 40 Portrait of a Man as a Poet
Chapter 41 A Walk: A Place
Chapter 42 A Nocturnal Chat
Chapter 43 Circles: Children's Stories
Chapter 44 A Family Picture
Chapter 45 A Will
Chapter 46 Completions: Two Possible Stories
Chapter 47 Crowding
Chapter 48 The Wheel Turns
Chapter 49 An Israeli Sorrow
Chapter 50 Love
Chapter 51 A Miss: A Possible Journey to Bendery
Chapter 52 Dry Sobs
Chapter 53
Chapter 54

Recenzii

[Avraham Balaban's] lyrical voice and his honest criticism of the kibbutz's social experiment will pull readers in to this elegy not only for a father but for the slow death of the socialist kibbutz dream.
A top-notch work of literature. . . . Avraham Balaban seeks to express the sorrow of parents who missed parenthood and of children who missed childhood, and does this with talent and an exacting, complex, and most sensitive vision.
Breathtaking. . . . This marvelous literary text weaves together present and past, and original metaphors accompany authentic memories and literary inventiveness.
The child examines with an adult eye all the participants in the drama of his childhood, looking backward, at times with anger and at times with pity, pain, irony, and love. This child is a universal hero. . . . Avraham Balaban's memoir is literature at its best.
An important and sensitive literary work, written with restraint, wisdom, piercing insight, and impressive narrative and descriptive skill.
Many stories were written about childhood, motherhood, and parenthood in the early days of the kibbutz movement, but Balaban conveys the collective voice with great talent and new force.
An English translation of a book which has appeared in Hebrew to great critical acclaim and wide appeal. A fascinating work.
An extremely impressive book.
Each section is as sharp as a poem. . . . This is an unforgettable book for anyone whose life is, or has been, bound up with the state of Israel.
After his father's death, Avraham Balaban, author and Professor of modern Hebrew literature at the University of Florida, journeyed back to the kibbutz in Israel where he was raised. Intending to mourn the death of his father, Balaban is confronted with the ghost of his own life as he swirls into his past and sifts through his memories of being raised on a kibbutz. Upon examination, Balaban laments over what he know sees as a childhood lost, and parents who were restricted in parenting style by the limitations and structure of communal living. Balaban's prose is lyrical, and the book is a well-written and honest account of his own childhood that is sure to hit a nerve in all who venture to read it.