interpretation of Kafka, or when Scholem discusses the strange combination of awe and presumptuousness in the relation of commentator to scripture, we encounter fluid but nonetheless definable textual categories. These categories, however much they undergo change, have operated continually in the domain of Jewish writing, which is not, then, merely congruent with the indeterminacy of writing itself.
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But there are those who would stabilize the notion of Jewish writing to an even greater extent. The contemporary tendency to conflate literary theory and traditional Jewish textuality has led to an extraordinary debate, which is, fortunately, shedding as much light as heat on what could be called the identity crisis of Jewish writing. Against what they regard as the extravagance of post-structuralist claims on Jewish writing, cautious and responsible scholars have sought to delineate Jewish textual traditions from more recent developments, while at the same time acknowledging parallels and even influences. 20 These scholars (who might well cast a cold eye on some passages in this book) have provided an important service by carefully explaining many of the intricacies of aggadah, midrash, and kabbalah: indeed, we are witnessing a renaissance of traditional Jewish studies, but one which must also take literary theory into account. As David Stern observes, "The difference separating these conceptions is at least one sign of the distance that interpretation has traveled in the course of history." 21
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So meaning has wandered and continues to wander; whether one is an advocate of writerly freeplay or scholarly definitiveness, the trope itself seems unavoidable in any discussion of Jewish literature. The reason for this, of course, is that for Jews, wandering is far more than a trope: it is a historical given. If, in what I have said up until now, history tends to appear as a fold in the text, then in the matter of exile, the text must appear as a fold in history. Loss and exile, the third of my themes, however much they lend themselves to literary matters, insistently point to the unstable boundary between the book and the world. "Our Homeland, the Text": here we are reminded of the enduring historical substitution of textual rootlessness for geopolitical ground, which, in George Steiner's crucial formulation, achieves its most probing, most disturbing modern articulation.
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I do not think we can speak of the Jewish experience of exile and the concomitant Jewish devotion to the text, even when they are coupled with utopian and messianic longings for restoration, as constituting a single ideology. Aside from the term's connotation of "false consciousness" which the presence of the utopian and the messianic
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