The heavily plotted novels of Lithuanian novelist …

Years: 1869 - 1869

The heavily plotted novels of Lithuanian novelist Abraham Mapu, influenced stylistically by Victor Hugo and Eugène Sue, romanticize a sovereign Israel and indirectly pave the way for the revival of Jewish nationalism and the Zionist movement.

His second novel, Ashmat Shomron (Guilt of Samaria, 1865), is a biblical epic about the hostility between Jerusalem and Samaria in the time of King Ahaz.

His third, Ayit tzavua' (The Hypocrite; 1858-69), marks a departure.

Dealing with contemporary life in the ghetto and attacking its social evils, it portrays a new type, the maskil (possessor of Haskala), in a fight against orthodox obscurantism.

Another novel, Hoze hezyono (The Visionary; 1869), an exposé of Hasidism, is confiscated by religious authorities.

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