![]() ![]() It doesn’t take us long to realize, though, that Cullinane will be presented as the prototypical Reactionary White Guy who needs to have his brain scrubbed and that right early. The chapters are held together by a connecting story concerning a modern archaeological dig on the site by a mixed Jewish-Arabic expedition headed by an Irish-Catholic American, John Cullinane. ![]() It covers the history of a settlement in Palestine from prehistoric times to the 1960’s, with detailed chapters concerning its pagan origins, its flowering under the kingdoms of David and Solomon, and its existence under Babylonian, Greek, Roman, Mohammedan, Crusader, and British rule. ![]() In terms of sheer scope, The Source certainly is among Michener’s most ambitious works. To the Bible-believing Christian, it also must be ranked among the most insidious pieces of popular fiction of the twentieth century. The Source would go on to become the top-selling novel of 1965 and could be said to represent the pinnacle of Michener’s career. Written during a time when American interest and sympathy towards Israel was at its peak, due in no small part to works such as Leon Uris’s Exodus and the movie Judgment at Nuremburg. Nowhere was this more apparent than in his 1965 novel about Israel, The Source. ![]() In addition to Michener’s obvious themes of multiculturalism (by force, if necessary) and miscegenation, another trope that turns up often in his works is a particular admiration for the romanticized version of Judaism. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |