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54+ Obras 372 Miembros 5 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: from Wikipedia

Obras de Mendele Mocher Sforim

Fishke el cojo (1888) 63 copias
Wishing-Ring (2003) 15 copias
The Nag (1955) 15 copias
The parasite (1956) 10 copias
Jiddische Erzählungen (1984) 8 copias
Die Mähre (1988) 3 copias
Di kliatshe (2006) 3 copias
הסוסה 1 copia
ספר הקבצנים (1988) 1 copia
Geklibene verk — Autor — 1 copia
הברנש הקטן (2003) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

A Treasury of Yiddish Stories (1958) — Contribuidor — 339 copias
Yenne Velt: The Great Works of Jewish Fantasy and Occult (1976) — Contribuidor — 327 copias
The Shtetl (1979) — Contribuidor — 158 copias
The Oxford Book of Jewish Stories (1998) — Contribuidor — 132 copias
The Jewish caravan : great stories of twenty-five centuries (1935) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones129 copias
A Golden Treasure of Jewish Literature (1937) — Contribuidor — 75 copias
No Star Too Beautiful: A Treasury of Yiddish Stories (2002) — Contribuidor — 57 copias
A History of Yiddish Literature (1985) — Associated Name — 37 copias
Meesters der Hebreeuwse vertelkunst — Autor — 17 copias
Meesters der Jiddische vertelkunst (1959) — Contribuidor — 16 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Sforim, Mendele Mojcher
Nombre legal
Abramowitz, Sjolom Jankev
Fecha de nacimiento
1836
Fecha de fallecimiento
1917
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Wit-Rusland (geboren)
Oekraïne (overleden)
Lugar de nacimiento
Kapoelje, Wit-Rusland
Lugar de fallecimiento
Odessa, Russia
Lugares de residencia
Odessa, Oekraïne
Ocupaciones
romanschrijver
schrijver van korte verhalen
toneelschrijver
rabbi
Biografía breve
Mendele Mocher Sforim was the pen name of Sholem Yankev Abramovich, born to an impoverished Jewish family in Kopyl, Russia (present-day Belarus). He adopted his pseudonym, which means "Mendele the Book Peddler," in 1879. His father died shortly after his 13th birthday. Mendele studied at yeshivas in Slutsk and Vilna until he was 17. He traveled extensively around Lithuania, Belarus, and Ukraine in the company of a man who served as the source for the title character of Mendele's later stories about Fishke der Krumer (Fishke the Lame). Mendele's first published article, on educational reform, "Letter on Education," appeared in 1857 in the first Hebrew weekly newspaper, Ha-maggid. In Berdichev, Ukraine, where he lived from 1858 to 1869, he began to publish fiction in Hebrew and Yiddish. His work realistically portrayed Jewish life and the world of the shtetl with all its poverty and oppression, but with humor and social satire. He left Berdichev for Zhitomir, where he trained as a rabbi, and then became the head of the traditional Jewish school for boys in Odessa in 1881. In Odessa, he became an influential leader of an emerging Yiddish literary movement, and is today credited by many as the "grandfather of Yiddish literature." His writings stand along those of Sholem Aleichem and I.L. (Isaac Leib) Peretz as classics. His greatest Yiddish work, Kitsur massous Binyomin hashlishi (The Travels and Adventures of Benjamin the Third, 1875), is a kind of Jewish Don Quixote.

Miembros

Reseñas

La letteratura jiddisch ha avuto, nella sua stagione classica, un valore esemplare. Essa si presenta come l'espressione di legami reali fra il poeta e il mondo di affetti e di sentimenti, come un esempio .. (fonte: Google Books)
 
Denunciada
MemorialeSardoShoah | 3 reseñas más. | Jun 3, 2020 |
I was expecting old fashioned, but this book was surprisingly readable, and often sardonic. Written by my great-uncle--or maybe my great-great-uncle--under his nom de plume, which translates from Yiddish as "Mendele the Bookseller." His birth name was Jacob Abramovich. Based upon the Adventures of Don Quixote.
 
Denunciada
copyedit52 | 3 reseñas más. | Jun 17, 2019 |
The sages of Glupsk, known for their ingenuity in making mountains out of molehills, chasing wild geese and locating mares' nests, have, by drawing sundry inferences, by reading between the lines, shown that the legend is not without a considerable amount of truth.

Discovered this at a sale this afternoon, a Don Quixote of the shtetl. Apparently the author grew bored and abandoned it, though he did translate it from Hebrew to Yiddish.

Several laugh out loud moments, mostly of the bumpkins being tormented by spouses variety. Take my wife--please. Two would be prophets heed the call of itchy feet and hit the road braving bedbugs, amorous calves and the machinations of conspirator.… (más)
 
Denunciada
jonfaith | 3 reseñas más. | Feb 22, 2019 |
I think this would be funnier and cleverer if I lived then and there. As it is, it sometimes feel too clever by half. Benjamin wants to follow in the tradition of Benjamin of Tudela (1130-1173) and J.J. Benjamin (1818-1864), who traveled to far-off places and he names himself Benjamin the Third. (J.J. Benjamin called himself Benjamin the Second.) He manages to convince his friend, Senderel, a day-dreamer and henpecked husband, to join him in his journeys as he tries to get to Jerusalem. In fact, they don't get much further than about three towns away from their shtetl. Benjamin doesn't really need to worry about leaving his family destitute, since he spent his days studying and hanging out in the synagogue while his wife provided their income.

I was troubled by the two men abandoning their wives, so that they are agunot, without any remorse. The details of the story give a sense of what everyday life was like in the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe. The introduction, uncredited, explains the importance of Shalom Jacob Abromovich, whose pen name is Mendele Mocher Seforim, to Yiddish and Hebrew literature.
… (más)
½
1 vota
Denunciada
raizel | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 4, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
54
También por
12
Miembros
372
Popularidad
#64,810
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
31
Idiomas
9
Favorito
2

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