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Gerald Jacobs

By

Gerald Jacobs,

Gerald Jacobs

Opinion

A victory we can take pride in

The world has taken notice of our Jewish Jane Austen

October 14, 2010 10:34
2 min read

Is it good for the Jews? You bet. Howard Jacobson's triumph at the Man Booker awards this week should reassure those among us who have sensed of late a frisson directed towards Jews and things Jewish from the British cultural establishment.

Not only is Jacobson's winning title The Finkler Question the most Jewish of his 11 novels (including the decidedly heimishe Kalooki Nights and The Mighty Walzer) but the award was made on purely literary grounds. There was nothing political and certainly nothing "correct" in the choice of a book that deals so unapologetically with the subject of Jewish identity and mercilessly lampoons Jews and Jewish groupings who disown Israel and support the Palestinians.

In announcing the verdict at the Guildhall, the chairman of the Man Booker judges, Andrew Motion, ascribed no "ethnic" or "exotic" qualities to The Finkler Question. He didn't even use the word "Jewish". There was no talk of "gaining insights into a closed but hilarious world of ancient traditions and funny, foreign words…"

No, none of that. This was the level playing field of literature, upon which only serious readers tread, none of whom would describe Howard Jacobson's writing as ethnic or exotic. Andrew Motion spoke not of Jacobson's chutzpah but of his intelligence and subtlety. He said the novel was "very funny" but he also said it was "very sad".

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