CDE Studies 21

Ulrike Behlau-Dengler
Zakhor! Remembering the British-Jewish Experience in British-Jewish Drama after 1945

Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2011.
ISBN 978-3-86821-314-0, 494 S., kt., € 48,50 (2011)

The very existence of British-Jewish drama has long been an open question. In October 2000, David Jays noted that „Jewish writing is a neglected presence in British Theatre“ and, in 2003, Diane Samuels referred to the same problem at a panel discussion stating that only Jews seem to notice that „[Harold] Pinter’s a profoundly Jewish writer“. In 2011, the question has been rephrased – but seemingly not settled – as Pascal asks the question whether „writing Jewish“ might (still) be a problem. As this thesis shows, British-Jewish drama seems to be very much alive, and memory and the act of remembering itself have emerged as central topics within British-Jewish drama. This thesis isolates four central ‚time-spaces‘, or chronotopes (Bakhtin), around which strategies of remembering and thus definitions of ‚who are we as British Jews‘ have clustered since the end of the Second World War: the Jewish East End as the birthplace of British-Jewish identity for Jewish immigrants and their children between the 1880s and the Blitz; the Jewish communities‘ suffering during the Middle Ages both on the continent and on British soil – which is also read as a precursor to the anti-Jewish hatred that marked the Holocaust; the Holocaust and its reverberations both on the continent and on UK territory; and the hopes and struggles for a stable and peaceful State of Israel from the 1940s until today. These imagined time-spaces have emerged as cornerstones of British-Jewish collective memory and have been used to structure and assign meaning to the experience of Jewish life in Great Britain. The dramatisations of British-Jewish figures of memory by Kops, Wesker, Steven Berkoff, Pascal, Samuels and Pinter are aimed at both Jewish and non-Jewish audiences, challenging Holocaust amnesia as well as simplistic and anti-Semitic representations of Jewish life. They do not intend to establish a dramatic sub or counter culture, but try to open up the monolithic self-definition of British collective memory to include a British-Jewish perspective as well, dealing with essential experiences and narratives of Jewish – but not just Jewish – life in Britain today.


1993 Siegen

„New Forms of Comedy“
Proceedings


1994 Siegen

„Centres and Margins“
Proceedings


1995 Dresden

„Drama and Reality“
Proceedings


1996 Blaubeuren (University of Tübingen)

„Beyond the Mainstream“
Proceedings


1997 Paderborn

„Anthropological Perspectives in/on Contemporary Theatre and Drama in English“
ReportProceedings


1998 Leutersdorf (University of Mainz)

„Race and Religion in Contemporary Theatre and Drama in English“
ReportProceedings


1999 Rauischholzhausen (University of Giessen)

„Mediated Drama / Dramatized Media: From Boards to Screens to Cyberspace“
ReportProceedings


2000 Bad Alexandersbad (University of Bayreuth)

„Crossing Borders: Intercultural Drama and Theatre at the Turn of the Millennium“
ReportProceedings


2001 Vienna

„(Dis)Continuities: Trends and Traditions in Contemporary Theatre and Drama in English“
ReportProceedings