DeKoven Ezrahi is the daughter of Janet and Herman DeKoven. Her mother was a social worker born in Ostrowiec, Poland, who at age 12 immigrated to the United States with her family. Her father was a lawyer born in Chicago, Illinois. Ezrahi was born in Washington D.C. and grew up in Highland Park, Illinois. She attended Wellesley College and spent her junior year at the Hebrew University, where she completed her bachelor's degree in English and Political Science. Ezrahi returned to the United States and received her Masters and PhD in English and American literature from Brandeis University..
Career
In 1978, Ezrahi was appointed head of the literature section at the Institute for Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University. She also taught at the Rothberg School for Overseas Students at Hebrew University and served as the head of the Department of Humanities at the "Mechina", the University's academic preparatory program. In 2008, Ezrahi joined the Hebrew University's department of General and Comparative Literature. In 2011 she retired as full professor. DeKoven Ezrahi served as an academic advisor to the Jewish Museum in New York ; she received grants from the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture and from the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 2007, DeKoven Ezrahi was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship for her project "Jerusalem and the Poetics of Return". Ezrahi has been a member of the editorial boards of Tikkun, History and Memory and Teoriya u-vikoret. She has written reviews and opinion pieces for The New Republic, Haaretz, Tikkun, Salmagundi and others. She is a peace activist in Israel and when the First Intifada broke out she was one of the initiators of a dialogue group in Jerusalem with Palestinian residents of Beit Sahour.
Works
DeKoven Ezrahi's early work engaged with representations of the Holocaust in literature and culture, and the theme of exile and homecoming in Jewish literature. Her book By Words Alone: The Holocaust in Literature was published by the University of Chicago Press in 1980 and was nominated for the National Jewish Book Award in 1981. DeKoven Ezrahi went on to focus on the Holocaust as a shifting component in the works of Israeli writers from S.Y. Agnon, Aharon Appelfeld and Dan Pagis to David Grossman. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, she took part in discussions within the new theoretical field initiated by Saul Friedlander that dared to probe the "limits of representation.". "Booking Passage: On Exile and Homecoming in the Modern Jewish Imagination" published in 2000 by the University of California Press, Berkeley, explores the Jewish Journey and the trope of "return" in Jewish literature, beginning with the poems of Yehuda Halevi in the 12th century. It was nominated for the Koret prize in 2001. A version of the first half of the book was published in Hebrew by Resling Press in 2017. DeKoven Ezrahi posits a generic range of Jewish literature in the twentieth century on three continents. In contrast to the tragic Jewish narrative prevailing in Europe after the shoah and the epic narrative of modern Israel, American Jewish literature has a special place in the writings of DeKoven Ezrahi as a stage for "the Jewish comedy. In many essays, but particularly in monographs on Philip Roth and Grace Paley, she points to the moment in the middle of the twentieth century when the barriers were lifted and the comic potential was unleashed at the intersections between modern Jewish and Christian religious imaginations. DeKoven Ezrahi's latest research focuses on post-1967 Israel, specifically on the yearning for physical proximity to the sacred following Israel's victory in Jerusalem. "When Exiles Return", "From Auschwitz to the Temple Mount: Binding and Unbinding the Israeli Narrative" and '"To what shall I compare thee?' Jerusalem as Ground Zero of the Hebrew Imagination", explore these dilemmas. Their resolutions are articulated in the fiction of S.Y.Agnon and the poetry of Yehuda Amichai. DeKoven Ezrahi was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem in 2019.
Publications
Personal life
Ezrahi is married to Bernard Avishai, a writer, journalist and academic. They live alternately in Jerusalem and in New Hampshire. She has three children from her marriage to her first husband, Yaron Ezrahi.