Imagen del autor

Esther Kreitman (1891–1954)

Autor de Deborah

7+ Obras 146 Miembros 6 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Esther Kreitman

Deborah (1936) 122 copias
Diamonds (2010) 12 copias
Blitz (2004) 5 copias
Briliantn 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Singer Kreytman, Hinde Ester
Otros nombres
Kreytman, Esther
Fecha de nacimiento
1891-03-31
Fecha de fallecimiento
1954-06-13
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK
Poland
Lugar de nacimiento
Bilgoraj, Poland
Lugar de fallecimiento
London, England, UK
Lugares de residencia
Warsaw, Poland
Antwerp, Belgium
London, England, UK
Ocupaciones
novelist
translator
short story writer
Relaciones
Singer, Isaac Bashevis (brother)
Singer, Israel Joshua (brother)
Kreitman, Morris (son)
Singer, Joseph (nephew)
Biografía breve
Hinde Esther Kreitman, née Singer, was born into a devout and literary Jewish family in Poland. Both her father, a rabbi, and her mother were great storytellers, and her younger brothers Israel Joshua Singer and and Isaac Bashevis Singer became famous writers. Esther received only the limited, traditional education for a a Jewish girl of her era, but she she managed to learn to read several languages and became interested in world literature. She attended some free evening classes in Warsaw, where the family moved in 1910. In Warsaw she also belonged for some time to a socialist political discussion and debate group. She began to write at an early age. In 1912, Esther accepted an arranged marriage to Avraham Kreitman, a diamond cutter, and went to live with him in Antwerp. The couple had a son, Morris Kreitman, who became a journalist and writer under the names Maurice Carr and Martin Lea. World War I caused the family to flee to London. After the disintegration of her marriage in 1926, Esther Kreitman divided her time between London and Warsaw, struggling to support herself by writing, translating and public speaking. She translated the works of Dickens and Shaw into Yiddish, and published her own stories in Yiddish-language magazines. Her first published novel was Der Sheydim-Tants (The Devils' Dance, 1936); it was translated by her son in 1946 as Deborah. Her second novel, Brilyantn (Diamonds), was published in 1944. Yikhes (Lineage), was a collection of short stories published in 1949; translated by Dorothee van Tendeloo, it appeared in English as Blitz and Other Stories in 2004.

Miembros

Reseñas

I picked this up randomly at my college library. I'm so glad I did.

I'm taking a class on the history of Eastern European Jewry right now and it's awesome. So many things I'm studying are in this book—the struggle of this new Hasidim, the tense relationship to the Haskalah, the even more tense relationship to the over-whelming Jewish presence in the radical socialist movement, the place of Zionism, the gender struggles of having a husband incredibly knowledgable in Talmud/Midrash but having no worldly knowledge, the wife who has always been learned in the latter and is dependent on her witless husband—it's just awesome. Deborah is ultimately a victim simply for being a woman in this society, and I respect the way Esther wrote about it. It's sad. Deborah speaks primarily to the pain of classically gendered tradition. She has no autonomy as a women, no ability to study as she wish, no choice in marriage, no chance to leave her husband as she slowly starves to death.

Learning about these movements and religious practices I've come to the (early) conclusion that we must allow women to follow traditional mitzvot if they wish, not necessarily for any overtly feminist measure, but because it is really no wonder women are alienated when denied the spiritual practices that might strengthen a relationship Judaism. These are not unholy women—they are holy people—craving a connection that should not be denied to them. And Deborah should have been able to do that.
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Denunciada
Eavans | 4 reseñas más. | Feb 17, 2023 |
Sono racconti che danno un’idea di quanti bellissimi romanzi avrebbe potuto scrivere l’autrice, se non fosse stata «sacrificata» prima da un’infanzia e una giovinezza passate a leggere di nascosto tra una faccenda domestica e l’altra, e poi da un matrimonio combinato da un padre indifferente e da una madre che la trovava «bruttissima». Sono tutti molto diversi l’uno dall’altro, per temi, stile, tono, dimensioni. E quasi tutti contengono lo spunto per un romanzo, probabilmente già nella mente della Kreitman mentre li scriveva.… (más)
 
Denunciada
kikka62 | Apr 2, 2020 |
When I picked this book up I knew nothing of the title or the author; I took it on trust, to add to my collection, because it was a green Virago Modern Classic.

“All the world has heard of the great Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer and of his brother Israel Joshua. Few have heard of their sister Hinde Esther who lived in obscurity and also wrote novels.”

This is an autobiographical novel, set in Poland’s Jewish community in the early years of the twentieth century. Deborah was the daughter of a rabbi, raised to dedicate her life to one thing: ‘the bringing of happiness into her home by ministering to her husband and bearing him children.’

Her father was mystical, impractical and almost fatally unworldly; her mother was educated, sceptical, but accepting of the role she had been given. Deborah was less accepting. She was bright and curious; she saw her brother being encouraged to study, being allowed to speak freely, being allowed to come and go as he liked; she wanted the same things, but she could not have any of them.

It was clear that this would be an unhappy story, but it was utterly involving though, because the whole of Deborah’s world – the people, the places, the way of life – were so richly evoked, so utterly real.

Life takes the family from a tiny village, to a Hasidic court in a larger town, and finally to Warsaw. It is there that Deborah comes of age, and when she meets other Jews who are prepared to stretch or break the rules of their society she thinks that she has found her place in the world. But she encounters things that her life has not prepared her for, she is confounded by expectations of what a rabbi’s daughter must be, and things go terribly wrong.

Heartbroken, almost completely broken, Deborah submits to an arranged marriage.

It is a disaster, and story ends as Deborah descends into madness and Europe descends onto war.

Esther Kreitman told her story wonderfully well. She was clear-sighted and intelligent, she understood why the world was what it was, why people were what they were. But that didn’t stop her being angry about her situation, or passionate about the things she believed in.

She pulled me right through the story; I was involved with Deborah, I cared about her, I wanted to know how her story would play out, from the first page to the last.

I wish I could say more but I can’t, because this novel is almost too vivid, too real. It makes me feel horribly inarticulate.

This book is a wonderful profound testament; catching a life and speaking of an aspect of women’s history I have never encountered in fiction before.

I wish I could tell you that the author found the place that she wanted in the world; but sadly I can’t.

I’m so pleased though that she did have a son, and that he translated this book that she wrote in Yiddish, many years after the fact, into English.
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Denunciada
BeyondEdenRock | 4 reseñas más. | Nov 20, 2015 |
Kreitman is Isaac Bashevis Singer's and Israel Joseph Singer's older sister. Deborah is an autobiographical novel and exposes pre-WWI Polish Jewry in all its nakedness. The way Judaism was practiced - by the sincere and spiritual, and by the manipulators and their hypocrisy. Most Jews lived in poverty; a select few were able to live a bit more comfortably. While Deborah mostly describes the day to day lives of regular people, we also read about gangsters, Communism, and the particular hardships and limitations of Jewish women. Like Deborah, they were made to feel superfluous, and were discouraged from seeking education or lives outside of the home, and were pushed into marriage and motherhood regardless of their feelings.

Deborah comes across as confused and depressed. I kept wishing she had more "gumption" like her brother Michael but he was permitted more freedom, and knew how to manipulate his parents. Deborah is both angry and resigned to being used by her mother as the family drudge.

Kreitman excels in describing characters and scenes. Makes one feel as though we are right there meeting and speaking with these folks.

Good read.
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Denunciada
Bookish59 | 4 reseñas más. | Feb 11, 2011 |

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Obras
7
También por
3
Miembros
146
Popularidad
#141,736
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
18
Idiomas
6
Favorito
1

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