259:, a book published in 1940 and written for children. The book is about two boys in pre-World War II Vienna: Karl, a Christian from a Socialist family, and his friend Emil, a Jew. Glatstein wanted children to understand the changes taking place in Europe, where Vienna was no longer the same Vienna ("vienn is shoyn nisht di aygene vienn fun amol").;
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Glatstein was interested in exotic themes, and in poems that emphasized the sound of words. He traveled to Lublin in 1934 to attend his mother's funeral and this trip gave him insight into the growing possibility of war in Europe. After this trip, his writings returned to Jewish themes and he wrote
130:(1966). Glatstein's first book, titled under his own name, established him as the most daring and experimental of Yiddish poets in terms of form and style, as well as highly skillful in verbal manipulation of free verse poetry. He was also a regular contributor to the New York Yiddish daily
98:, but later dropped out. He worked briefly at teaching before switching to journalism. He married Netti Bush in 1919, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. His second marriage was to Fanny Mazel.
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in which he published a weekly column entitled "In Tokh
Genumen" (The Heart of the Matter). He was also the director of Yiddish public relations for the
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only later in life, winning the Louis Lamed Prize in 1940 for his works of prose, and again in 1956 for a volume of collected poems titled
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credo rejected metered verse and declared that non-Jewish themes were a valid topic for
Yiddish poetry. His books of poetry include
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Selected Poems of Yankev
Glatshteyn, translated, edited, and with an introduction by Richard J. Fein (Philadelphia, 1987)
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Glatstein, Jacob; Deshell, Maier; Guterman, Norbert (2010). Wisse, Ruth; Deshell, Maier; Guterman, Norbert (eds.).
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until the age of 16, supplemented by private education in secular subjects, and an introduction to
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289:(October House, 1973); translated from the Yiddish and with an Introduction by Ruth Whitman
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pre-Holocaust works that eerily foreshadowed coming events. After the
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He won acclaim as an outstanding figure of mid-20th-century
American
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529:"Jacob Glatstein | American author and literary critic | Britannica"
247:(Venn Yash Is Gefuhrn, 1938) resulted from his 1934 trip to Lublin;
114:(Introspectivist) literary movement and founded the literary organ
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A World
Literature To-Come: Jacob Glatstein's Vernacular Modernism
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179:. In 1966, he won the H. Leivick Yiddish literary award from the
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110:(1889–1966) and Minkoff (1898–1958), Glatstein established the
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Glatstein died on
November 19, 1971, in New York City.
553:"Jacob Glatstein Is Winner Of Yiddish Literary Prize"
309:"German and Yiddish in the Poetry of Jacob Glatstein"
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Emigrants from
Congress Poland to the United States
90:while studying English. He started to study law at
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706:, Middle Village NY: Jonathan David Publishers,
94:in 1918, where he met the young Yiddish poet
16:Polish-born American poet and literary critic
346:Mantovan, Daniela; Glatstein, Jacob (1995).
684:, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
590:. Oxford University Press. pp. 67–98.
30:, 20 August 1896 – 19 November 1971) was a
38:poet and literary critic who wrote in the
277:(Die Freid fun Yiddishen Vort, 1961); and
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396:"Jacob Glatstein: Poetry and Peoplehood"
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287:The Selected Poems of Jacob Glatstein
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152:, he became known for passionate
584:Zaritt, Saul Noam (2020-10-13).
241:(Yiddish meanings, 1937), poems;
235:(The Purim Guard, 1931), a play;
702:A History of Yiddish Literature
440:"The Magic Mountain of Yiddish"
438:Horn, Dara (13 November 2017).
226:(Credos, New York, 1929) poems;
214:book of poems in Yiddish, 1921;
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191:Glatstein was memorialized in
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400:The American Jewish Year Book
352:La Rassegna Mensile di Israel
348:"Jacob Glatstein (1896-1971)"
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271:(Jubilant Jews, 1946), poems;
265:(Poems of Remembrance, 1943);
78:. In 1914, due to increasing
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466:"Jacob Glatstein's Prophecy"
82:in Lublin, he immigrated to
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785:20th-century American poets
275:The Joy of the Yiddish Word
181:Congress for Jewish Culture
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655:. Yale University Press.
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154:poems written in response
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72:modern Yiddish literature
652:The Glatstein Chronicles
283:(A Yid fun Lublin, 1966)
142:American Jewish Congress
66:movement, he received a
681:American Yiddish Poetry
106:In 1920, together with
780:Yiddish-language poets
470:Jewish Review of Books
394:Lapin, Shmuel (1972).
251:Homecoming at Twilight
58:Glatstein was born in
775:Jewish American poets
698:Liptzin, Sol (1971),
307:Hadda, Janet (1981).
68:traditional education
220:(Fraye jerzn, 1926);
64:Jewish Enlightenment
464:Horn, Dara (2011).
92:New York University
557:The New York Times
533:www.britannica.com
501:The New York Times
173:Yiddish literature
108:Aaron Glanz-Leyles
691:978-0-8047-5170-4
662:978-0-300-16878-5
605:978-0-19-886371-7
245:When Yash Set Out
128:A Jew from Lublin
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559:. 1966-10-27.
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406:: 611–617.
263:Gedenklider
126:(1921) and
754:Categories
611:2023-06-02
570:2023-06-02
538:2023-06-02
514:2023-06-02
475:2023-06-02
313:Prooftexts
294:References
218:Free Verse
88:sweatshops
54:Early life
722:79-164519
630:ignored (
620:cite book
565:0362-4331
509:0362-4331
412:0065-8987
364:0033-9792
325:0272-9601
158:Holocaust
120:Inzikhist
112:Inzikhist
746:Magazine
420:23603486
372:41263530
333:20689002
136:and the
36:American
156:to the
116:In zikh
40:Yiddish
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224:Kredos
187:Legacy
167:Awards
118:. The
102:Career
60:Lublin
34:-born
32:Polish
667:JSTOR
416:JSTOR
368:JSTOR
329:JSTOR
718:LCCN
708:ISBN
686:ISBN
657:ISBN
632:help
600:ISBN
561:ISSN
505:ISSN
451:2023
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197:Envy
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