Imagen del autor

Sholem Asch (1880–1957)

Autor de The Apostle

114+ Obras 2,003 Miembros 26 Reseñas 4 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Sholem Asch, one of the major figures in Yiddish letters, was born in Kutno, near Warsaw, Poland, in 1880. He began writing in 1901, first in Hebrew, then in Yiddish. His early, quietly humorous stories of Jewish small-town life brought Yiddish literature to international notice. His epic novels mostrar más and plays dealt with the contemporary scene and the Jewish experience on a worldwide scale. The range and reach of his talent were wide; his collected works appeared in Yiddish in 29 volumes. Many of his works have been translated into English, but some translations are now out of print. Asch spent most of his last two years in Bat Yam near Tel Aviv, Israel (although he died in London). His house in Bat Yam is now the Sholem Asch Museum. The bulk of his library, containing rare Yiddish books and manuscripts, including the manuscripts of some of his own works, is held at Yale University. Asch died in 1957. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Please note that this is not the same person as Solomon Elliott Asch the social psychologist -- please do not recombine them.

Créditos de la imagen: Image © ÖNB/Wien

Series

Obras de Sholem Asch

The Apostle (1943) 389 copias
The Nazarene (1939) 334 copias
Moses (1640) 157 copias
East River (1946) 156 copias
María. Una vida excepcional (1949) 131 copias
El Profeta (1950) 101 copias
Three Cities (1933) 78 copias
El judío de los salmos (1934) 73 copias
A passage in the night (1953) 59 copias
La familia de Sara Rifke (1707) 33 copias
In the Beginning (1935) 32 copias
Motke, el ladrón (1916) 31 copias
Tales of My People (1948) 28 copias
Petersburg (1929) 18 copias
The war goes on, (1936) 18 copias
Children of Abraham (1944) 14 copias
What I Believe, (1941) 11 copias
Uncle Moses (1918) 11 copias
Moscow (1931) 10 copias
Warsaw (1930) 8 copias
The God of Vengeance (1918) 7 copias
Théâtre yiddish (1997) 3 copias
Das Städtchen (1909) — Autor — 3 copias
Der Tehilim-Eid 3 copias
The Way to Oneself (1917) 3 copias
Mary [1913 novel] (1913) 2 copias
Naye dramen 1 copia
יוגענד 1 copia
Motke de dief 1 copia
Il diluvio 1 copia
כתבים 1 copia
Szriften 1 copia
The Mazarene 1 copia
Mother 1 copia
Ist River 1 copia
APÓSTOLO 1 copia
Nācarietis : [romāns] (1999) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

A Treasury of Yiddish Stories (1958) — Contribuidor — 339 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
The Seas of God: Great Stories of the Human Spirit (1944) — Contribuidor — 25 copias
October '43 (1954) — Prólogo — 20 copias
Meesters der Jiddische vertelkunst (1959) — Contribuidor — 16 copias
The Word Lives On: A Treasury of Spiritual Fiction (1951) — Contribuidor — 4 copias
Ostjüdische Erzähler (1980) — Contribuidor — 4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Asch, Sholem
Fecha de nacimiento
1880-11-01
Fecha de fallecimiento
1957-07-10
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Polen (geboren)
VS (paspoort)
Lugar de nacimiento
Kutno, Polen
Lugar de fallecimiento
Londen, Engeland, Groot-Brittannië
Lugares de residencia
Warsaw, Poland
Palestine(Israel)
USA
France
Bat Yam, Israel
Ocupaciones
novelist
dramatist
essayist
translator
Relaciones
Asch, Moses (son)
Asch, Nathan (son)
Nomberg, Hersh David (friend)
Peretz, I.L. (friend)
Organizaciones
Yiddish PEN Club (honorary president)
Premios y honores
Polonia Restituta (Polish Republic)
Biografía breve
Sholem Asch was the youngest of 10 children in a Hasidic Jewish family in Poland. He was given a traditional Jewish education and, being a talented student, also began teaching himself German and other secular subjects. His parents disapproved, so he moved out of their home and settled in the town of Włocławek, where he earned a living writing letters for illiterate people. Stimulated by his wide reading in European literature, Asch began writing stories himself. In 1900, he went to Warsaw, where his first Yiddish short story,"Moyshele," appeared in the journal Der yud. He followed this with a volume of Hebrew stories in 1902 and one of Yiddish stories in 1903. That same year, he married Mathilde (Madzhe) Shapiro, the daughter of a well-to-do Hebrew teacher and poet, with whom he had two sons. In 1904, he published the first of his major works, A Shtetl, a long prose poem. His first play, Mitn shtrom (With the Current), written in Polish, was staged that year in Krakow. In 1907, Asch completed his most sensational play, Got fun nekome (G-d of Vengeance), first produced in a German version by Max Reinhardt in Berlin and later staged on Broadway. Asch made his first visit to Palestine in 1908 and wrote a series of sketches under the general title Erets Yisroel (Land of Israel), published in 1911. In 1909 and 1910, Asch made his first visit to the USA, gathering impressions that he later incorporated into his fiction. In the single year 1913, he published five major works. After the start of World War I, Asch emigrated to the USA, settling in New York, and became an American citizen. He became a regular contributer to the Forverts (Jewish Daily Forward), the most widely-read Yiddish newspaper in America, for nearly 25 years. He also became involved in public life, becoming one of the founders of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC). After the war, Asch returned to live in Warsaw, but made frequent trips to Weimar Germany. By 1920, Asch had become a famous writer and in honor of his 40th birthday, a New York committee published his collected works in 12 volumes. In 1932, he was elected honorary president of the Yiddish PEN club. His monumental trilogy Farn mabl (Before the Flood), consolidated his international reputation. Written and published in stages between 1921 and 1931, it was translated into English in 1933 under the title Three Cities. A prolific writer who continually expanded the range of his work, Asch brought Yiddish literature into the mainstream of European and American culture, although he remained deeply attached to the legacy of the Jewish past. In 1938, as Nazism and World War II threatened, Asch returned to the USA. His 1939-1949 trilogy of novels, The Nazarene, The Apostle, and Mary, caused great controversy and harsh criticism from the Jewish community. During his last 10 years, Asch returned to Jewish themes and settings. His final completed novel was The Prophet (1955). At the end of his life, Asch lived in Bat Yam, a suburb of Tel Aviv.
Aviso de desambiguación
Please note that this is not the same person as Solomon Elliott Asch the social psychologist -- please do not recombine them.

Miembros

Debates

Group tags en YIVO Encyclopedia (marzo 2012)
collaborative work on Sholem Aleichem en Collaborative work (octubre 2009)

Reseñas

Librería 7. Estante 5.
 
Denunciada
atman2019 | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 30, 2019 |
Librería 7. Estante 5.
 
Denunciada
atman2019 | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 30, 2019 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
114
También por
14
Miembros
2,003
Popularidad
#12,855
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
26
ISBNs
109
Idiomas
9
Favorito
4

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