Old New Land

Front Cover
M. Wiener, 1997 - Fiction - 295 pages

Old New Land forever altered the face of the Middle East. The book was a nineteenth-century utopian blueprint for a modern state of Israel. There were Jewish settlers in Palestine, and Zionist ideas had existed in Eastern Europe before Herzl, but Herzl made Zionism into a cultural and political movement acceptable to Western governments and intellectuals. His prophecy at the end of this book became reality: "If you will it, it is not a fable."

The author, founder of the Zionist movement, considered this utopian story his best literary work: an expression of his art, with a political message. His biographer, Amos Elon, placed Old New Land "in the mainstream of fin-de-siècle art. Its pursuit of arcadian bliss within a mystic community and its haunted preoccupation with dreams recall Gustav Mahler's music."

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Contents

An Educated Desperate Young Man
3
Haifa 1923
53
The Prosperous Land
115
Copyright

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About the author (1997)

Theodor Herzl, author (1860-1904) lived most of his life in Vienna as a star journalist and successful author. The Dreyfus Affair and the new Austrian anti-Semitism made him into a political activist.

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