The sound of the unsayable: Jewish secular culture in arnold schönberg and aharon appelfeld

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Abstract

This article examines the use of central elements of the Jewish religious repertoire and transcendental realm, such as prophecy or revelation, within the aesthetic secular realm of musical avant-garde and modern Hebrew literature. By focusing on two case studies, I attempt to shed new light on the question of Jewish secular culture. Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951), an Austrian Jewish composer, was born into an assimilated Viennese family and converted to Protestantism before returning to Judaism in the 1930s while escaping to the United States. Aharon Appelfeld (1932-2018), an Israeli Jewish writer, was born in Czernowitz to assimilated German-speaking parents, survived the Holocaust and emigrated to Israel in 1946. My claim is that in their works both composer and author testify to traumatic experiences that avoid verbal representation by: (1) subverting and transgressing conventional aesthetic means and (2) alluding to sacred tropes and theological concepts. In exploring Schoenberg’s opera Moses und Aron and Appelfeld’s Journey intoWinter among others, this article shows how the transcendent sphere returns within the musical and poetic avant-garde (musical prose, 12-tone composition, prose poem, non-semantic or semiotic fiction) as a “sound” of old traditions that can only be heard through the voices of a new Jewish culture.

Original languageEnglish
Article number334
JournalReligions
Volume10
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Keywords

  • Aharon appelfeld
  • Arnold Schoenberg
  • Jewish secular culture
  • Modern Hebrew literature
  • Moses und Aron
  • Religiosity

RAMBI Publications

  • RAMBI Publications
  • Schoenberg, Arnold -- 1874-1951 -- Criticism and interpretation
  • Appelfeld, Aharon -- Criticism and interpretation
  • Hebrew literature, Modern -- History and criticism
  • Music by Jewish composers -- History and criticism
  • Avant-garde (Aesthetics)
  • Judaism and secularism

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