Have Fun & Lose Weight ³ßãéǵããǵ FREE ù³é±ǵÐîÜÐÉ Ljǵ ߍą³Â³Éǵv_: in a Joyful, Non-Judgmental, Relaxed Atmosphere LjǵPlus Samba, Barre, Weight Training, Yoga Ljǵ!ߣéǵ4Кé³ÐÉ – Northwestern/Orchard Lake, Across from Langan’s Bowling Alley 248-325-9167 www.celyfi t.com PHOTO BY SONY CLASSICS 33008 Northwestern Hwy West Bloomfi eld, MI 48322 The film has been released during a time of heightened anti-Semitic and anti-immigration sentiment and fear of the other, all addressed by Aciman in the novel and experi- enced by him in his own life. Even now, said Aciman, after 49 years of living in New York City, where he is currently a distinguished professor at the Graduate Center of City University of New York, teaching the history of literary theory and the works of Marcel Proust, he wonders if he’s really a New Yorker or still a stranger in a strange land. “The fact is that I live in New York and love it, but is it really home?” he said. “I don’t think so. Do I have an identity? I’m not sure.” The same questions of identity, he said, apply to sexuality, which he’s frequently asked about (he’s been a happily married father for many years, he said). Anti-Semitism, said Aciman, never goes away. “It’s there, forever, but nowadays, particularly in academic circles, anti-Zionism has become legitimate, and anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism are just couched differently,” he said. (For more on Aciman’s thoughts on Judaism, read his 2000 essay, “Reflections of an Uncertain Jew,” published in the Threepenny Review.) He visited Israel when the New York Times sent him to write a piece about Bethlehem in 1995. “I wrote a wonderful piece,” he said. • jn January 4 • 2018 31