Other Things Being Equal

Other Things Being Equal

Other Things Being Equal

Other Things Being Equal

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

A timely reissue of Emma Wolf’s 1892 novel, which boldly interrogates the implications of Jewish-Christian marriage and examines the role of the "new woman" within the traditions of the Jewish home.

Widely regarded as a literary genius in her day, the Jewish American author Emma Wolf (1865-1932) wrote vivid stories that penetrated the struggles of women and people of faith, particularly Jews, at the turn of the twentieth century. This reissue of the 1916 revised edition of one of her most popular novels, Other Things Being Equal, first published in 1892, introduces Wolf to a new generation of readers, immersing them in an interfaith love story set in her native San Francisco in the late nineteenth century. The novel's protagonist, Ruth Levice, a young intellectual from an upper-class Jewish family, meets Dr. Herbert Kemp, a Unitarian, and falls in love. The novel's force lies in its unwillingness to adhere to ideological stands. A woman need not give up marriage and home to be strong, independent, and unconventional; a Jew does not have to be orthodox to remain close to her heritage and her faith.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814330227
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 03/01/2002
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Barbara Cantalupo is an associate professor of English at The Pennsylvania State University and is the editor of The Edgar Allen Poe Review

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments7
Introduction9
Other Things Being Equal59
Notes269

What People are Saying About This

Professor of English at Florida International University and Author of A Jew in the Public Arena: the Career of Isra - Meri-Jane Rochelson

Other Things Being Equal provides important insights into the American assimilationist tradition that is an essential context for the study of Jewish writing and culture at the turn of the century; at the same time, it expands our understanding of the range of women's writing in nineteenth-century America. Barbara Cantalupo's fine introduction illuminates the biographical and historical contexts that produced the novel. This new edition is an important work of literary recovery.

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