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  • TITLE 1
  • TITLE 2
  • CERTIFICATE
  • DECLARATION
  • CONTENTS
  • ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
  • NOTE ON DOCUMENTATION
  • INTRODUCTION
  • I DIFFERENTIATING HISTORY AND POPULAR FICTION
  • A. Looking at History
  • 1. The Image of the West-Running Brook
  • 2. The lmage of the Selfish-Gene
  • 3. The Symbol Manipulating Industries
  • 4. The Displacement of Environments
  • 5. The Writer as Jester
  • 6. A Structured, Order of Things
  • 7. Reading as a Means of Wish-Fulfilment
  • History in the age of revisionism
  • B. Towards Popular Fictlori: The Imagenerative Formations
  • The lmagenerative Formations
  • C. Reading: A Game of Recoveries.
  • II THE INTERFACE BETWEEN POPULAR FlCTlON ANDHISTORY
  • A. The Anatomy of an Acquittal
  • III MATRlX OF POPULAR FICTION
  • 1. A Mirror upto the Middle Class
  • 2. The Individual and the Universal
  • 3. The Sense of Belonging to the Home
  • 4. The Family: as a Symbol of Completeness
  • 5. The Ideal of Patriotism
  • 6. The Moses-Figure
  • 7. Triumphing over Odds
  • 8. A Case for Continuities
  • 9. Empire-Building
  • 10. Making of the Perfect Society
  • 11. The Fear of the Enemy
  • 12. The Struggle for Power
  • 13. The Promethean-Figure
  • 14. The Cult of the Individual
  • 15. The Individual as a Non-Conformist,
  • 16. Winning at Any Cost
  • 17. The Voice of the First Person Pronoun
  • 18. The Christening of the Hero
  • 19. The Comic-Strip Logic
  • 20. The Classical Idea of Excellence
  • 21. Privileging of the Masculine Ideal
  • 22. The Woman as an Object of Male Gratification
  • 23. Worship of the Warrior
  • 24. The Feminine Allure of War
  • 25. The Personal and the Mythical
  • 26. The Stant towards Generalities
  • 27. Dictionary of Popular References
  • 28. The Narrator-Character as the Insider
  • 29. The
  • 30. The Fictional Tempered with the Historical
  • 31. Manipulation of the Pronominal Position
  • 32. Shifting Locales
  • 33. Persistence with the Straight Clironology
  • 34. The Marketing of America
  • 35. A Game of Chess
  • 36. The carpe-diem Factor
  • 37. The Society of the Colloquial
  • 38. Mythology as a Narrative Sub-Text
  • 39.The Hero: A Paragon of Virtues
  • 40. Reiterating Popular Images to Mythify
  • 41. The Tone of Impersonality
  • 42. Allegorizing the Historical
  • 43. The Significance of Numbers
  • 44. The In-Weave of the Bible
  • 45. Taking Sides
  • 46. The David and Goliath Face-Off
  • 47. Impressions from the Classics and the Fairy Tales
  • 48. Yearning for the past
  • 49. From the Pauper to the Prince
  • 50. The Hand of Merlin
  • 51. The Classics in the Western Canon
  • 52. The Fear of a Frankenstein
  • 53. The Latter Day Promised Land
  • 54. Cultural Imperialism
  • 55. The East-West Stand-Off
  • 56. The Jews: The Chosen People
  • IV ISRAEL IN POPULAR FICTION: SEVEN APPROACHES
  • 1. Sustainig Continuity in the Telling of History.
  • 1.1 Memory and Continuity
  • 1.2 Evasion of Chronological Specificities
  • 1.3 Continuity through Chronological Specifics
  • 1.4 The Continuity of Faith.
  • 1.5 Interweaving the Biblical, the Historical and the Fictional
  • 1.6 The Continuity of Culture
  • 1.7 Celebrating Historical Milestones
  • 1.8 Continuity through Reiteration.
  • 1.9 Perceptions about the Jewlsh Races Uniqueness.
  • 2. The Bible Seen as a Cornucopia of Historical References
  • 2.1 The Bible is Living History.
  • 2.2 The Bible is the Conscience of the Race.
  • 2.3 As a Source of Inspiration.
  • 2.4 The Voice of Prophecy.
  • 2.5 Anthropomorphism
  • 2.6 The Bible is the Childs Primary School
  • 2.7 The Place for the Miraculous and the Improbable.
  • 2.8 The Biblical Bridging the Historical and the Fictional
  • 2.9 The Incremental Effect.
  • 2.10 Allegorical Possibilltles.
  • 3. The Tribes Need to Defend its Home-Territory.
  • 3.1 The pleasures of following the underdog
  • 3.2 The Tribal Impulse of Self-Preservation.
  • 3.3 Tlie Idea of a Settled Home.
  • 3.4 The Romance of War.
  • 3.5. Home as a Geographical Concreteness
  • 3.6 The Semiotic Equation between Home and the FeminineBody.
  • 3.7 The Paradox of the Jewish Situation.
  • 3.8 Sustaining the Imaginary Homeland.
  • 3.9 The Difference between the Jews and the Arabs.
  • 3.10 The Biblical Sanction.
  • 3.11 The Arrival of the Leader.
  • 3.12 America is the Other Promised 1, and.
  • 4. The Cult of the Individual
  • 4.1 The Profile of the Individual.
  • 4.2 The Hero us a Superntan.
  • 4.3 Superimposition: Using Historical Material
  • 4.4 Superimposition: Using Literary Classics.
  • 4.5 From Without tbe State: The Celebration of Prometheus.
  • 4.6 From Within the State: The Image of Moses.
  • 5. The Myth of David and Goliath
  • 6. Calculated Xenophobia or the Hierarchy of Hate.
  • 7. The Telling of the History in the Story.
  • 7.1 Stoking the Readers Voyeuristic Impulse.
  • 7.2 Following the Destiny of the Hero.
  • 7.3 Naming the
  • 7.4 The Principle of Iteration.
  • 7.5 When the Line between Fact and Fiction is Fudged.
  • 7.6 The Timely Diversions of the Novelist.
  • 7.7 The Space for Sentimentality.
  • 7.8 The Allure of the Fairy Tale.
  • 7.9 The Mutuality of Interests.
  • 7.10 The Get-Noticed Factor.
  • 7.11 Caught between Shanny Bmakhloket and Tsorik Cyyun.
  • 7.12 The Quiet Biases of the Novelists.
  • V CONCLUSION
  • The Matrix of Popular Flction
  • The David - Goliath Divide
  • READING FROM IMAGINARY HOMELAND TO GEOGRAPHICAL CONCRETENESS
  • SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY