Double Diversity

Jewish Women Writers in Canada

Authors

  • Catherine Caufield Concordia University of Edmonton

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.39524

Keywords:

Jewish, Canada, history, women, poetry, novel, short story, Canadian literature, Jewish literature

Abstract

This article is based on Our Canada: Jewish-Canadian Women Writers, a federally funded research project exploring the literary output of more than one hundred women authors in this country, together with the body of commentary on their work. Elucidating themes of immigration, tradition, identity, family, hope, and strengthening connections, the prose and poetry of these authors prods us to think about what Canada means and what these authors have contributed to our shared cultural imaginary. This literature serves to deepen our understanding of broadly diverse nations-both Jewish and Canadian. It is timely in terms of current reflection, examination and questioning of the multicultural paradigm that has shaped Canadian identity for over thirty years. Nothing is more challenging than grasping, or attempting to grasp, the mindset of others with radically different understandings and beliefs. Part of this challenge are the social and political implications of how particular individuals within particular communities have understood themselves and their place in the Canadian mosaic-often over generations. The contributions of Jewish women writers to Canadian literature respond to this challenge, beginning in the late nineteenth century in Montréal, developing in key centres across the country, and continuing in the twenty-first century.

Author Biography

  • Catherine Caufield, Concordia University of Edmonton

    Catherine Caufield, PhD (Toronto) is interested in polysemic expression of religious experience, and ways in which diverse discourses co-exist within and between religions. She has received a number of awards, including a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto and a Foreign Government Award with the Government of Mexico. She has published dozens of articles in refereed journals, as well as the books Hermeneutical Approaches to Religious Discourse in Mexican Narrative (2003) and Shmiot Fugue: Neomysticism in the Voices of Three Jewish-Mexican Women Writers (2017).

References

Bissoondath, Neil

No Place Like Home. New Internationalist 305 (September): 20–23.

[1994] Selling Illusions: The Cult of Multiculturalism in Canada. Penguin, Toronto.

Bruser Maynard, Fredelle

Raisins and Almonds. Paperjacks, Don Mills, ON.

Crown, Sarah

Anne Michaels, Fugitive Author. The Guardian, 2 May. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/may/02/interview-anne-michaels

Fuerstenberg, Adam

‘Ida Maza’. Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women’s Archive, 1 March. https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/maze-ida

Government of Canada

Multiculturalism Act. https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/c-18.7/page-1.html

Graham, Gwethalyn

[1944] Earth and High Heaven. Cormorant, Toronto.

Greenstein, Michael

Introduction: Sambation to Saskatchewan. In Contemporary Jewish Writing in Canada: An Anthology, edited by Michael Greenstein, xi–l. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE.

Helman, Claire

On-the-Job Lessons about Being Jewish. Canadian Woman Studies 16(4): 75–76.

Kattan, Naïm

Mon nom est Esther. In Kattan, La Reprise: Nouvelles, 222–33. LaSalle, Hurtubise, Quebec.

Laurence, Margaret

Dance on the Earth: A Memoir. McClelland & Stewart, Toronto.

Lavallé, Omer, and Tabitha Marshall

[2008] Canadian Pacific Railway. In The Canadian Encyclopedia, edited by Bronwyn Graves. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/canadian-pacific-railway

Margolis, Rebecca

Remembering Two of Montréal’s Yiddish Women Poets: Esther Segal and Ida Maza. Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women’s Studies and Gender Issues 19: 141–73.

–2012 Yiddish and Multiculturalism: A Marriage Made in Heaven? Canadian Ethnic Studies 43(3): 213–25. https://doi.org/10.1353/ces.2011.0047

Massey, Irving

Public Lives in Private: Ida Maza and the Montréal Yiddish Renaissance. In An Everyday Miracle: Yiddish Culture in Montréal, edited by Ira Robinson, Pierre Anctil and Mervin Butovsky, 129–57. Véhicle, Montréal.

Ida Maza: The ‘Den Mother’ of Yiddish Montréal. In Beyond the Books: Yiddish Writers and their Descendants. Wexler Oral History Project, 13 November. Yiddish Book Centre, Amherst, MA.

McCormack, Brendan

Official Multiculturalism’s Funding of Canadian Literature: The Writing and Publications Program. CanLit Guides: Digital Learning Resource by Canadian Literature, 24 May. https://canlitguides.ca/brendan-mccormack/official-multiculturalisms-funding-of-canadian-literature-the-writing-and-publications-program/

McGrath, Robin

Shaking the Family Tree: A Personal Exploration of Anti-Semitism in Newfoundland. Canadian Woman Studies: Jewish Women in Canada 16(4): 12–16.

Michaels, Anne

Fugitive Pieces. McClelland & Stewart, Toronto.

The Winter Vault. Bloomsbury, London.

Panofsky, Ruth

Success Well-earned: Adele Wiseman’s The Sacrifice. English Studies in Canada 27: 333–51. https://doi.org/10.1353/esc.2001.0039

The Force of Vocation: The Literary Career of Adele Wiseman. University of Manitoba Press, Winnipeg.

At Odds in the World: Essays on Jewish Canadian Women Writers. Inanna, Toronto.

Pick, Alison

Between Gods. Doubleday Canada, Toronto.

Roller, Alyse Fisher

The Literary Imagination of Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Women. McFarland & Company, Jefferson, NC.

Rosenberg, Louis

Canada’s Jews: A Social and Economic Study of the Jews in Canada. Canadian Jewish Congress, Montréal.

Schnoor, Randal

The Contours of Canadian Jewish Life. Contemporary Jewry 31: 179–97. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12397-011-9075-6

Schoenfeld, Stuart

Jewish Canadians. In The Canadian Encyclopedia, edited by Bronwyn Graves. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/jewish-canadians

Seelig, Rachel

Like a Barren Sheet of Paper: Rokhl Korn from Galician Orchards to Postwar Montréal. Prooftexts 34: 349–77.

Spelman, Elizabeth

Inessential Woman: Problems of Exclusion in Feminist Thought. Beacon, Boston.

Spergel, Julie

Canada’s ‘Second History’: The Fiction of Jewish Canadian Women Writers. Kova?, Hamburg.

Waddington, Miriam

Mrs. Maza’s Salon. Canadian Woman Studies 16(4): 119–22.

Published

2020-07-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Caufield, C. (2020). Double Diversity: Jewish Women Writers in Canada. Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 33(1), 30–48. https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.39524

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>