You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Conversations with Chaim Potok »

Book cover image of Conversations with Chaim Potok by Daniel Walden

Authors: Daniel Walden
ISBN-13: 9781578063468, ISBN-10: 1578063469
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Date Published: July 2001
Edition: (Non-applicable)

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Daniel Walden

Book Synopsis

One of America's most popular Jewish writers, Chaim Potok (b. 1929) is the author of such novels as The Chosen (1967), The Promise (1969), The Book of Lights (1981), and Davita's Harp (1985). Each of his novels explores the tension between tradition and modernity, and the clash between Jewish culture and contemporary Western civilization, which he calls "core-to-core culture confrontation."

Although primarily known as a novelist, Potok is an ordained Conservative rabbi and a world-class Judaic scholar who has also published children's books, theological discourses, biographies, and histories.

Conversations with Chaim Potok presents interviews ranging from 1976 to 1999. Potok discusses the broad range of his writing and the deep influence of non-Jewish novels-in particular, Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited and James Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man-on his work. Interviews bear witness to Potok's many other influences-Orthodox Jewish doctrine, Freudian psychoanalytical theory, Picasso's Guernica, and Jewish kabbalah mysticism.

Though labeled an American Jewish writer, Potok argues that Flannery O'Connor should then be called an American Catholic writer and John Updike an American Protestant writer. "In his mind," editor Daniel Walden writes, "just as Faulkner was a writer focused on a particular place, Oxford, Mississippi, . . . so Potok's territory was a small section of New York City."

Potok often explores conflict in his writings and in his interviews. Strict Jewish teachings deem fiction an artifice and therefore unnecessary, yet since the age of sixteen Potok has been driven to write novels. At the root of all of these conversations is Potok's intense interest in the turmoil between Jewish culture, religion, and tradition and what he calls "Western secular humanism."

As he discusses his work, he continually includes broader issues, such as the state of Jewish literature and art, pointing out with pride and enthusiasm his belief that Jewish culture, in the twentieth century, has finally begun to have a significant role in producing and shaping the world's art and literature. Whether discussing the finer details of Talmudic textual analysis or his period of chaplaincy during the Korean War, Potok is articulate and philosophical, bringing deep consideration into what may seem small subjects. Although his novels and histories take place primarily in the recent past, the Chaim Potok that emerges from this collection is a writer deeply rooted in the tensions of the present.

Daniel Walden is Professor Emeritus of American Studies, English and Comparative Literature at Penn State University. He has written or edited several books, including On Being Jewish (1974), Twentieth Century American Jewish Writers (1984), The World of Chaim Potok (1985), and American Jewish Poets: The Roots and the Stems (1990).

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chronology
A Conversation with Chaim Potok1
Chaim Potok28
An Interview with Chaim Potok31
Odyssey Through Literature: An Interview with Chaim Potok on "The Kabbalah," in His Novel, The Book of Lights46
When Culture Confronts Faith55
An Interview with Chaim Potok63
An Interview with Chaim Potok88
The Prime of Chaim Potok92
Potok Has Chosen to Create Worlds from Words100
Radio Curious: Chaim Potok104
Giving Shape to Turmoil: A Conversation with Chaim Potok122
Response Interview with Chaim Potok141
Chaim Potok: The Gates of November146
Chaim Potok155
HARDtalk: Chaim Potok157
A Visit with Chaim Potok167
Index179

Subjects