The Jerusalem Post

Harold Bloom, legendary literary critic, dies at 89

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Harold Bloom, the influentia­l literary critic born to a Yiddish-speaking family of Orthodox Jewish immigrants, has died at 89.

Bloom, a member of the faculty at Yale University since 1955, died Monday in New Haven, Connecticu­t. He taught his final class at Yale just days earlier.

A fierce defender of the Western literary canon – “Shakespear­e is God,” he once declared – Bloom also was the author of dozens of books, several of them best-sellers. He coined the term “school of resentment” to refer to those critics whom he believed prioritize­d the social and political value of literary works over their artistic merit.

His 1990 The Book of J, a commentary on David Rosenberg’s translatio­n of the first five books of the Bible, identifies “J” – the name biblical scholars give to the author of the oldest sections of the Pentateuch – as a woman who lived at the time of King Solomon. Kabbalah and Criticism explored the methods of interpreta­tion employed by the developers of the Jewish mystical tradition.

“I am nothing if not Jewish,” he told the The Baltimore Sun in 2003. “I spoke Yiddish before I spoke English, I still read Yiddish poetry, and recite Yiddish poetry to myself. I really am a product of Yiddish culture. But I can’t understand a Yahweh, or a God, who could be all-powerful and all-knowing and would allow the Nazi death camps and schizophre­nia.”

Born in 1930 in New York City, the youngest of five children, Bloom’s parents were Orthodox Jews who emigrated from Eastern Europe. His father, William, was a garment worker who was born in Odessa. Bloom didn’t learn to read English until he was five.

Bloom attended Cornell University on a full scholarshi­p, where he studied English, particular­ly the Romantic poets. He graduated in 1951 and went to Yale, where he earned his doctorate with a dissertati­on on Percy Shelley, the English poet.

He married his wife, Jeanne, in 1958. The couple had two sons. (JTA)

 ?? (Wikipedia) ?? HAROLD BLOOM
(Wikipedia) HAROLD BLOOM

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