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PHILIP ROTH’UN ZUCKERMAN BOUND ADLI ESERİNDE SOSYAL KISITLAMALAR VE KİMLİK PROBLEMLERİ

SOCIAL CONSTRAINTS AND IDENTITY PROBLEMS IN PHILIP ROTH'S ZUCKERMAN BOUND

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DOI: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.9761/JASSS1866

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Author NameUniversity of AuthorFaculty of Author
Abstract (2. Language): 
Philip Roth dealing with anti-Semitism, alienation and identity in especially Jewish society is one of the distinguish American-Jewish writers in the twentieth century. Zuckerman Bound recounts the famous Jewish author Nathan Zuckerman who has marginal novels which are not popular among Jews. In The Ghost Writer, Zuckerman challenging with his family, relatives and milieu intends to be a novelist like Lonoff. The protagonist becomes a famous novelist in his other novel, Zuckerman Unbound. However, he is in the middle of a war against the society. In The Anatomy Lesson he is subverted by his mentality and brother who thinks that Zuckerman is responsible for their parents’ death. The protagonist intensifies on Jewish society and culture rather than himself in his last novel Prague Orgy. Not only does Zuckerman discuss with people in other religion but also he is a controversial person in Jewish society. In fact, Roth depicts himself by penning a protagonist Zuckerman. The feeling of disorientation and statelessness rise in Zuckerman/Roth mind in four novels. For example in Anatomy Lesson, Zuckerman becomes "a helpless patient who is compelled to ask himself whether or not he can even become someone different" (Wilson, 2005: 104). Also Greenberg depicts the same novel as "Zuckerman's involvement with transgression as a man and a writer" (1997). In each novel, the reader can find the attempts of adaptation, isolation and how the protagonist alters in both Jewish and American society. Even though the themes dealt with differ from each novel, by and large, the plot is predicated on the protagonist’s psychology. In this study, Roth / Zuckerman' s identity and the social constraints shaping them will be argued.
Abstract (Original Language): 
Özellikle Yahudi toplumunda anti-semitizm, kimlik ve yabancılaşma konularıyla ilgilenen Philip Roth yirminci yüzyılın en önemli Amerikan-Yahudi yazarlarından biridir. Zuckerman Bound adlı eseri Yahudiler arasında popüler olmayan marjinal romanlara sahip Nathan Zuckerman adlı ünlü bir yazarı konu alır. The Ghost Writer adlı eserinde Zuckerman yaşadığı çevreyi, akrabalarını ve ailesini de karşısına alarak kendine örnek gösterdiği Lonoff gibi romancı olmak niyetindedir. Zuckerman Unbound romanında artık romanı yazmış ünlü bir yazardır. Ancak toplumla olan savaşı başlamıştır. The Anatomy Lesson eserinde ise ebeveynlerinin ölümünden kendisini suçlayan kardeşi ve kendi psikolojisi yaşamını altüst etmiştir. Son romanı Prague Orgy daha ziyade toplumun Yahudi toplumuna ve kültürüne olan bakışı üzerine yoğunlaşmıştır. Zuckerman sadece başka dinlerdeki insanlarla çelişmez ayrıca Yahudi toplumunda da tartışmalı bir isimdir. Gerçekte kaleme aldığı başkahraman Roth’un kendisidir. Romanlarda aidiyetsizlik ve tabiyetsizlik romanda Zuckerman/Roth’un benliğinde bir sorundur. Örneğin, The Anatomy Lesson adlı romanda Zuckerman “başka birisi dahi olup olamadığını sorgulamak zorunda kalan muhtaç bir hastaya” (Wilson, 2005: 104) dönüşmüştür. Greenberg ise aynı romanı “Zuckerman’ın bir insan ve yazar olarak sınırları zorlaması” (1997) olarak değerlendirir. Her bir romanda okuyucu adaptasyon, yalnızlaşma ve başkahramanın Yahudi Amerikan toplumundaki değişiklikleri bulmaktadır. Ana temalar her ne kadar romandan romana çeşitlilik gösterse de, genel olarak konu başkahramanın psikolojik durumu üstüne kurulmuştur. Bu çalışmada kendisini şekillendiren Roth/Zuckerman’ın kimlik ve sosyal zorlamaları tartışılacaktır.
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