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The notion of identity in Mary Antin's "The Promised Land"

Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar), 2006, 12 Pages
Author: Christiane Abspacher
Subject: American Studies - Literature

Details

Event: Hauptseminar Amerikanistik (Literaturwissenschaft)
Institution/College: University of Regensburg (Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Philosophische Fakultät )
Tags: Mary, Antin, Promised, Land, Hauptseminar, Amerikanistik
Category: Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar)
Year: 2006
Pages: 12
Grade: 1,7
Bibliography: ~ 5  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V57975
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-52280-9
ISBN (Book): 978-3-638-75238-1
File size: 220 KB

Abstract

In order to be able to grasp the dimension of the role identity plays in Mary Antin’s The Promised Land, one has to take into consideration the author’s biographical background, as the first part of her life differs completely from the later years. She is born in the Jewish Polotzk near Witebsk in White Russia. In 1894, the family emigrates to the United States. Mary receives solid school education and manages to have her first poem published in the Boston Herald at the age of fifteen. With the help of diligence, natural ability, curiousness and luck, Mary Antin advances from her proletarian neighbourhood to higher educated circles. Antin publishes several essays, short stories and poems, gives lectures and gets involved with the loosening of laws restricting immigration. Already at the age of twenty, Mary Antin writes her autobiography The Promised Land (formerly published under the name of "From Polotzk to Boston"), which describes her childhood in Russia, her immigration to America, the initial problems in her new homeland and her success in gaining ground. Especially the preface causes attention, as she calls her life “unusual, but by no means unique. (…) [A] concrete illustration of a multitude of statistical facts”, while she is distancing herself from her former life as Maryashe Weltman in Polotzk. The high degree of self- reflexiveness and the dispartment of her own person into at least two identities predestine her book as a subject of inquiry by means of sociological investigation in the field of identity research. In order to discuss Mary Antin’s notion of identity, it is required to outline the term itself. Within the last decades, this concept has become central to social science and it has turned from a technical term to an almost redundantly used catchphrase in virtually every field of everyday life. Thus, the perception of identity is as subjected to historical, social, political and emancipational changes as every other term referring to the self- reflexion of an individual, which also develops according to altering circumstances. This essay tries to concretise the term "identity" in order to be able to grasp the difference between the "given identity" in Polotzk and the "hybrid, constructable identity" Mary Antin experiences in the United States. Moreover, this essay will give possible reasons for Mary Antin's comprehensive closure with her past in Russia.


Excerpt (computer-generated)

Universität Regensburg
Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
Hauptseminar Transnational American Memories
Sommersemester 2006, 9. Semester

The Notion of Identity in Mary Antin′s "The Promised Land"

by: Christiane Abspacher

 


Table of Contents

I. A short abstract of Mary Antin’s biography

II. The notion of identity in Mary Antin’s The Promised Land.…

1. Disambiguation of “identity”
2. Polotzk: Identity as a given attribute
3. Boston: Identity as a hybrid construction

III. Possible reasons for Mary Antin’s exhaustive closing with her past

IV. Works of Reference


 

 

“I was born, I have lived, I have been made over. Is it not time to write my life′s story? I am just as much out of the way as if I were dead, for I am absolutely other than the person whose story I have to tell.” (Mary Antin: The Promised Land, Introduction)

I A short abstract of Mary Antin’s biography

In order to be able to grasp the dimension of the role identity plays in Mary Antin’s The Promised Land, one has to take into consideration the author’s biographical background, as the first part of her life differs completely from the later years. She is born by the name of Maryashe Weltman on the 13th of June 1881 in the Jewish Polotzk near Witebsk in White Russia. Initially relatively rich, Antin’s family impoverishes due to her father’s long- winded disease and growing business competition in Polotzk: Upon the Russian Czar’s orders, Jews are bound to move to and stay within certain Pales, such as Antin’s hometown. In 1891, her father Israel Weltman leaves Russia for Boston wherefrom he arranges the family’s emigration in 1894. After the Antins (formerly: Weltmans) have to move several times for financial and business- orientated reasons, Mary receives solid school education and manages to have her first poem published in the Boston Herald at the age of fifteen. With the help of diligence, natural ability, curiousness and luck, Mary Antin advances from her proletarian neighbourhood to higher educated circles, where she meets her future husband Amadeus Grabau, a professor of the Columbia University. Antin publishes several essays, short stories and poems, gives lectures on the immigration of Russian Jews and on Americanism and gets involved with the loosening of laws restricting immigration. In 1918, she withdraws from public life due to a disease, and on the 15th of May 1949, she dies in New York1.

Already at the age of twenty, Mary Antin writes her autobiography The Promised Land (formerly published under the name of From Polotzk to Boston), which describes her childhood in Russia, her immigration to America, the initial problems in her new homeland and her success in gaining ground. Especially the preface causes attention, as she calls her life “unusual, but by no means unique. (…) [A] concrete illustration of a multitude of statistical facts”2, while she is distancing herself from her former life as Maryashe Weltman in Polotzk. The high degree of self- reflexiveness and the dispartment of her own person into at least two identities predestine her book as a subject of inquiry by means of sociological investigation in the field of identity research.

II The notion of identity in Mary Antin’s The Promised Land

Before discussing Mary Antin’s notion of identity, it is required to outline the term itself. Within the last decades, this concept has become central to social science and it has turned from a technical term to an almost redundantly used catchphrase in virtually every field of everyday life. Thus, the perception of identity is as subjected to historical, social, political and emancipational changes as every other term referring to the self- reflexion of an individual, which also develops according to altering circumstances.

1. Disambiguation of “identity”

To put it simple, identity is an answer to the question “Who am I?” This query is the very basis of identity research, formulated by Antonio Blasi, a North American social scientist3. Of course, the circumstances are not as plain as this – at least, not any more: The topic of identity grows more and more complex, as the opportunities provided for a human being expand. Social layers have become penetrable, females obtained liberties of many kinds, education has become accessible regardless of gender and religion, professions become more and more nonrigid and some jobholders are expected to be flexible and all purpose all-rounders. According to Heiner Keupp, identity results from a dialogic process involving both the individual human being and society.4 Concerning this matter, sociologists offer a diversity of views, which can be scaled down to two opposite approaches:

a) Identity is given
b) Identity is constructed

In the first case, identity is understood as the substance of a person, comprising unchangeable attributes like gender, ethnicity and social status. This approach assumes that each human being has one identity for his or her lifespan, which does not – or even cannot – undergo a change. The second proposal takes into consideration quite different aspects of personality: Identity is ascribed to a person by others, or put simply: You are what others make you. Thus, identity can change according to the way one presents oneself in public. Hence, a person can not only have one unchangeable identity for life, but one is able to take over various roles in succession or even at the same time, as exemplified in the case of a person’s public and private identity. In this context, Keupp introduces the term “individual life- collages”5.

[...]


1 http://www.bikonline.de/histo/antin.html.

2 Antin, Mary: The Promised Land, Introduction.

3 Höfer, Renate and Heiner Keupp: Identitätsarbeit heute, p 7.

4 Keupp, Heiner. Diskursarena Identität, p. 11.

5 “individelle[...] Lebens- Collagen ”, ibid., p. 17.


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