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American literature, 2010-06, Vol.82 (2), p.361-388
2010

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
From Sympathy to Empathy: Anzia Yezierska and the Transformation of the American Subject
Ist Teil von
  • American literature, 2010-06, Vol.82 (2), p.361-388
Ort / Verlag
Durham: Duke University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2010
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Duke University Press Journals
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • The work of Anzia Yezierska presents a challenge to early-twentieth-century models of personhood, citizenship, and reading based on common assumptions regarding the nature of sympathy. Yezierska's deployment of what Mikkelsen terms "aesthetic empathy" draws on an emergent discourse about empathy that defined this concept quite differently from current usages. Rather than designating an interpersonal dynamic, this discourse considered empathy as a relation among bodies, objects, and desire within capitalism. Yezierska's fashion-conscious characters reveal a United States constituted by economically, socially, and culturally mobile, not to mention aesthetically pleasing, bodies. Both Jewish and American, these bodies serve as touchpoints for their own desiring gazes, positing a model of assimilative empathy for "native" and immigrant alike in which "looks" refer to both an act and its object, the agent blurred with the process of her continual self-invention as a hybrid of multiple cultures. Meditating on relations between subject and object, viewer and vision, consumer and commodity, Yezierska makes plain the role of citizen as consumer. Her work crystallizes the dominance of technologies that infused the public sphere with art and beautiful images of human forms, leading the modern spectator to see others as potential reflections of herself. Mikkelsen's examination begins with a reading of the short story "Wings"; continues with a discussion of Jewish American involvement with the garment industry and high fashion as imagined in (1922); and concludes with early theorizations of aesthetic empathy's role in motion pictures such as (1922), the film made of Yezierska's short stories.

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