Jewish American Literature: A Norton AnthologyJules Chametzky W. W. Norton & Company, 2001 - 1221ÆäÀÌÁö Classic and Contemporary Writers: Here, generously represented, are the writers who have shaped the tradition, among them Emma Lazarus, Abraham Cahan, Henry Roth, Nathanael West, Clifford Odets, Tillie Olsen, Bernard Malamud, Saul Bellow, Grace Paley, Philip Roth, Allen Ginsberg, Cynthia Ozick, and Harold Bloom. Joining them are younger writers such as Melvin Jules Bukiet, Jacqueline Osherow, Art Speigelman, Steve Stern and Allegra Goodman, who bring the tradition up to its thriving present. Yiddish and Hebrew Writing in AmericaJewish American Literature: Traces in breadth and depth America's rich Yiddish-language culture, from the work of Morris Rosenfeld and David Edelshtadt in the 1880s through the Yunge and Introspectivist movements to the post-Holocaust writings of Kadya Molodowsky and Isaac Bashevis Singer. Also represented is Hebrew writing, in translations of the work of Ephraim E. Lisitzky and modernist Gabriel Preil. Special Sections: "Jewish Humor" offers choice selections of Groucho Marx, Woody Allen, and a cluster of perennial Jewish jokes; "The Golden Age of the Broadway Song" samples the unforgettable lyrics of Oscar Hammerstein II, Irving Berlin, Frank Loesser, and Stephen Sondheim, among others; "Jews Translating Jews" reflects on the translator's role in transmitting tradition, gathering poems translated from Yiddish, Hebrew, German, Hungarian, Italian, and Spanish by Jewish American poets from Emma Lazarus to David Unger. Helpful and Lively Reader's Apparatus: The Reader's Apparatus includes a general introduction, period introductions, author headnotes, explanatory annotations, and selected bibliographies. |
µµ¼ º»¹®¿¡¼
76°³ÀÇ °á°ú Áß 1 - 5°³
xix ÆäÀÌÁö
... Land of Israel Dahlia Ravikovitch , Deep Calleth unto Deep 1167 1168 DAVID UNGER ( b . 1950 ) 1169 Isaac Goldemberg , The Jews in Hell 1169 SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHIES PERMISSIONS INDEX OF TRANSLATORS INDEX 1171 1207 1214 1215 Preface ...
... Land of Israel Dahlia Ravikovitch , Deep Calleth unto Deep 1167 1168 DAVID UNGER ( b . 1950 ) 1169 Isaac Goldemberg , The Jews in Hell 1169 SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHIES PERMISSIONS INDEX OF TRANSLATORS INDEX 1171 1207 1214 1215 Preface ...
1 ÆäÀÌÁö
... land of our destiny , " they say , that destiny being no less definitive than Israel's . In Nazi - occupied Europe ... land , the promised land . If those terms have sometimes been treated ironically - there was no gold in the streets ...
... land of our destiny , " they say , that destiny being no less definitive than Israel's . In Nazi - occupied Europe ... land , the promised land . If those terms have sometimes been treated ironically - there was no gold in the streets ...
4 ÆäÀÌÁö
... land was united under Christian sovereigns . Christian persecution and massacres during the period of the Crusades and in the time of the Plague or Black Death in the fourteenth century made life precarious in Western Europe for the ...
... land was united under Christian sovereigns . Christian persecution and massacres during the period of the Crusades and in the time of the Plague or Black Death in the fourteenth century made life precarious in Western Europe for the ...
21 ÆäÀÌÁö
... land promised them , often describing it as the promised land or the new Jerusalem . " Collect together thy long scattered people , " Moses Meyer exclaimed in Charleston , South Carolina , in 1806 , ¡° and let their gathering place be in ...
... land promised them , often describing it as the promised land or the new Jerusalem . " Collect together thy long scattered people , " Moses Meyer exclaimed in Charleston , South Carolina , in 1806 , ¡° and let their gathering place be in ...
22 ÆäÀÌÁö
... land — a land of opportunity and plenty - early Puritan literature from this period also records trials and disappointments . The hardships that the early settlers faced - difficulties planting and harvesting , hostile Native Ameri ...
... land — a land of opportunity and plenty - early Puritan literature from this period also records trials and disappointments . The hardships that the early settlers faced - difficulties planting and harvesting , hostile Native Ameri ...
¸ñÂ÷
VI | 24 |
VIII | 26 |
XII | 29 |
XIII | 32 |
XIV | 37 |
XVII | 38 |
XX | 41 |
XXI | 44 |
CCXLI | 538 |
CCXLII | 543 |
CCXLIII | 544 |
CCXLIV | 545 |
CCXLV | 546 |
CCXLVII | 547 |
CCXLVIII | 551 |
CCXLIX | 552 |
XXII | 46 |
XXIII | 54 |
XXV | 57 |
XXVI | 69 |
XXVII | 70 |
XXVIII | 72 |
XXIX | 73 |
XXX | 75 |
XXXI | 83 |
XXXII | 84 |
XXXIII | 86 |
XXXIV | 88 |
XXXV | 90 |
XXXVI | 91 |
XXXVII | 94 |
XXXVIII | 95 |
XXXIX | 99 |
XL | 100 |
XLI | 101 |
XLII | 103 |
XLIII | 104 |
XLIV | 105 |
XLVI | 106 |
XLVIII | 109 |
XLIX | 122 |
L | 123 |
LI | 134 |
LII | 135 |
LIV | 136 |
LV | 137 |
LVI | 138 |
LVII | 139 |
LX | 140 |
LXI | 141 |
LXII | 142 |
LXIII | 143 |
LXV | 144 |
LXVI | 145 |
LXVII | 150 |
LXVIII | 151 |
LXIX | 154 |
LXX | 155 |
LXXI | 162 |
LXXII | 163 |
LXXIV | 164 |
LXXV | 165 |
LXXVI | 167 |
LXXVII | 178 |
LXXVIII | 179 |
LXXIX | 190 |
LXXX | 191 |
LXXXI | 206 |
LXXXII | 206 |
LXXXIII | 215 |
LXXXIV | 216 |
LXXXV | 217 |
LXXXVI | 219 |
LXXXVIII | 220 |
XC | 221 |
XCI | 222 |
XCII | 223 |
XCIII | 228 |
XCIV | 229 |
XCV | 231 |
XCVI | 232 |
XCVII | 243 |
XCVIII | 244 |
XCIX | 245 |
CI | 246 |
CII | 247 |
CIII | 248 |
CIV | 250 |
CV | 251 |
CVI | 252 |
CVII | 255 |
CIX | 256 |
CX | 257 |
CXII | 258 |
CXIV | 259 |
CXV | 260 |
CXVI | 262 |
CXVII | 263 |
CXVIII | 264 |
CXX | 266 |
CXXII | 267 |
CXXV | 268 |
CXXVI | 280 |
CXXVII | 281 |
CXXVIII | 282 |
CXXIX | 283 |
CXXXI | 285 |
CXXXII | 287 |
CXXXIII | 288 |
CXXXIV | 289 |
CXXXV | 292 |
CXXXVII | 293 |
CXXXVIII | 294 |
CXL | 295 |
CXLI | 296 |
CXLIII | 297 |
CXLIV | 298 |
CXLV | 299 |
CXLVI | 300 |
CXLVII | 301 |
CXLVIII | 302 |
CXLIX | 303 |
CL | 304 |
CLI | 305 |
CLIII | 307 |
CLIV | 316 |
CLV | 317 |
CLVI | 318 |
CLVIII | 321 |
CLIX | 325 |
CLXI | 332 |
CLXII | 333 |
CLXIII | 341 |
CLXIV | 343 |
CLXV | 349 |
CLXVI | 351 |
CLXVII | 352 |
CLXVIII | 353 |
CLXIX | 354 |
CLXX | 355 |
CLXXII | 361 |
CLXXIII | 362 |
CLXXIV | 365 |
CLXXVI | 366 |
CLXXIX | 367 |
CLXXX | 368 |
CLXXXII | 369 |
CLXXXIV | 370 |
CLXXXV | 371 |
CLXXXVI | 372 |
CLXXXVII | 374 |
CLXXXVIII | 375 |
CLXXXIX | 376 |
CXC | 377 |
CXCI | 388 |
CXCII | 389 |
CXCIII | 390 |
CXCV | 392 |
CXCVI | 394 |
CXCVII | 398 |
CXCVIII | 399 |
CXCIX | 401 |
CC | 402 |
CCI | 403 |
CCII | 406 |
CCIV | 408 |
CCVI | 409 |
CCVIII | 410 |
CCIX | 411 |
CCX | 412 |
CCXI | 421 |
CCXII | 431 |
CCXIII | 432 |
CCXIV | 433 |
CCXV | 434 |
CCXVI | 435 |
CCXVII | 436 |
CCXVIII | 449 |
CCXIX | 450 |
CCXX | 494 |
CCXXII | 499 |
CCXXIII | 506 |
CCXXV | 507 |
CCXXVI | 510 |
CCXXVII | 511 |
CCXXVIII | 520 |
CCXXIX | 521 |
CCXXX | 527 |
CCXXXI | 528 |
CCXXXII | 530 |
CCXXXIII | 531 |
CCXXXIV | 532 |
CCXXXV | 533 |
CCXXXVI | 534 |
CCXXXVIII | 536 |
CCL | 553 |
CCLII | 554 |
CCLIII | 555 |
CCLIV | 556 |
CCLVI | 557 |
CCLVII | 568 |
CCLVIII | 569 |
CCLIX | 573 |
CCLX | 584 |
CCLXII | 585 |
CCLXIII | 595 |
CCLXIV | 597 |
CCLXVI | 598 |
CCLXVII | 599 |
CCLXVIII | 600 |
CCLXIX | 601 |
CCLXXI | 602 |
CCLXXII | 603 |
CCLXXIII | 604 |
CCLXXIV | 605 |
CCLXXV | 607 |
CCLXXVI | 608 |
CCLXXX | 609 |
CCLXXXII | 610 |
CCLXXXIII | 612 |
CCLXXXIV | 622 |
CCLXXXV | 629 |
CCLXXXVI | 630 |
CCLXXXVII | 634 |
CCLXXXVIII | 641 |
CCLXXXIX | 643 |
CCXCI | 644 |
CCXCII | 646 |
CCXCIV | 647 |
CCXCV | 669 |
CCXCVI | 676 |
CCXCVII | 677 |
CCXCVIII | 678 |
CCXCIX | 679 |
CCC | 680 |
CCCI | 686 |
CCCII | 687 |
CCCIII | 713 |
CCCIV | 714 |
CCCV | 715 |
CCCVII | 716 |
CCCIX | 718 |
CCCX | 734 |
CCCXI | 746 |
CCCXII | 747 |
CCCXIII | 768 |
CCCXIV | 769 |
CCCXV | 782 |
CCCXVI | 783 |
CCCXVII | 788 |
CCCXVIII | 789 |
CCCXIX | 790 |
CCCXXI | 792 |
CCCXXII | 793 |
CCCXXIII | 797 |
CCCXXIV | 801 |
CCCXXV | 802 |
CCCXXVI | 803 |
CCCXXVII | 805 |
CCCXXVIII | 806 |
CCCXXXI | 807 |
CCCXXXII | 809 |
CCCXXXIII | 810 |
CCCXXXIV | 811 |
CCCXXXV | 812 |
CCCXXXVI | 813 |
CCCXXXVII | 815 |
CCCXXXVIII | 818 |
CCCXXXIX | 821 |
CCCXL | 822 |
CCCXLI | 823 |
CCCXLII | 824 |
CCCXLIV | 826 |
CCCXLV | 829 |
CCCXLVII | 832 |
CCCXLVIII | 833 |
CCCXLIX | 844 |
CCCL | 845 |
CCCLI | 846 |
CCCLII | 848 |
CCCLIII | 849 |
CCCLIV | 850 |
CCCLV | 851 |
CCCLVI | 852 |
CCCLVII | 853 |
CCCLVIII | 854 |
CCCLX | 856 |
CCCLXI | 894 |
CCCLXII | 897 |
CCCLXIII | 899 |
CCCLXIV | 905 |
CCCLXV | 909 |
CCCLXVI | 910 |
CCCLXVII | 911 |
CCCLXVIII | 912 |
CCCLXIX | 913 |
CCCLXX | 916 |
CCCLXXI | 943 |
CCCLXXII | 959 |
CCCLXXIII | 966 |
CCCLXXIV | 967 |
CCCLXXV | 968 |
CCCLXXVI | 969 |
CCCLXXVII | 970 |
CCCLXXIX | 971 |
CCCLXXXI | 973 |
CCCLXXXIV | 977 |
CCCLXXXV | 984 |
CCCLXXXVI | 985 |
CCCLXXXVII | 992 |
CCCLXXXVIII | 994 |
CCCLXXXIX | 996 |
CCCXC | 997 |
CCCXCI | 998 |
CCCXCIII | 1003 |
CCCXCIV | 1004 |
CCCXCV | 1012 |
CCCXCVI | 1013 |
CCCXCVII | 1019 |
CCCXCVIII | 1020 |
CCCXCIX | 1033 |
CDI | 1034 |
CDII | 1036 |
CDIII | 1039 |
CDIV | 1040 |
CDV | 1043 |
CDVI | 1044 |
CDVII | 1053 |
CDVIII | 1054 |
CDIX | 1055 |
CDX | 1058 |
CDXI | 1064 |
CDXII | 1065 |
CDXIII | 1067 |
CDXIV | 1069 |
CDXV | 1071 |
CDXVII | 1072 |
CDXVIII | 1079 |
CDXX | 1081 |
CDXXI | 1083 |
CDXXII | 1091 |
CDXXIV | 1093 |
CDXXV | 1103 |
CDXXVII | 1106 |
CDXXVIII | 1107 |
CDXXIX | 1108 |
CDXXX | 1109 |
CDXXXII | 1110 |
CDXXXIII | 1118 |
CDXXXIV | 1119 |
CDXXXV | 1127 |
CDXXXVI | 1129 |
CDXXXVII | 1130 |
CDXXXVIII | 1131 |
CDXL | 1132 |
CDXLI | 1147 |
CDXLII | 1154 |
CDXLIV | 1155 |
CDXLV | 1156 |
CDXLVI | 1157 |
CDXLIX | 1158 |
CDLIV | 1160 |
CDLVI | 1161 |
CDLVII | 1162 |
CDLVIII | 1163 |
CDLX | 1164 |
CDLXIII | 1165 |
CDLXVII | 1166 |
CDLXVIII | 1167 |
CDLXX | 1169 |
CDLXXI | 1205 |
CDLXXII | 1212 |
CDLXXIII | 1213 |
ÀÚÁÖ ³ª¿À´Â ´Ü¾î ¹× ±¸¹®
Abraham Cahan American Jews anti-Semitism asked began BESSIE born brother called culture dark daughter David death door Edelshtein English eyes face father feel Fidelman German girl Gratz hair hand Harshav head heart Hebrew HENNIE holy HORESTAN I. L. Peretz immigrant Isaac Israel JACOB Jacob Glatstein Jewish American Jewish American literature Jews Judaism Kaddish knew laugh LEONORA literary literature live look Lower East Side married Miss Ralston Missis MORTY mother MYRON never night novel Ostrover play poems poet poetry pogroms Poland prayer published rabbi RALPH RIVKELE Russian Salzman Sephardic Sholom Sholom Aleichem shtetl smile story street Susskind synagogue talk Talmud tell Tevye thing thought told Torah Translated turned voice walked What's wife woman women words writing wrote YANKL Yiddish York young
Àαâ Àο뱸
8 ÆäÀÌÁö - It is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people, that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights. For happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.