Photo de l'auteur

Dovid Bergelson (1884–1952)

Auteur de The End of Everything

33+ oeuvres 168 utilisateurs 1 Critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

One of the masters of modern Yiddish prose, David Bergelson was born in Okhrimova, Ukraine, in 1884. His works deal with the decline of the small-town Ukrainian Jewish shtetl before and during the Russian Revolution. Bergelson left Soviet Russia for Western Europe in 1921, returning there in 1934. afficher plus On August 12, 1952, along with 23 other notable Soviet Jewish personalities, Bergelson was executed in Moscow. Although some of his shorter works have appeared in anthologies of Yiddish fiction in English translation, only one of his longer novels has been translated. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: Portrait of David Bergelson from the book «David Bergelson. Selected Works» (in Russian, translated from Yiddish). Moscow, 1957, Soviet Writer Publishing House

Séries

Œuvres de Dovid Bergelson

The End of Everything (1913) 45 exemplaires
Het geheim van Rakitne (1999) 33 exemplaires
Judgment: A Novel (1929) — Auteur — 8 exemplaires
Autour de la gare (1990) — Auteur — 7 exemplaires
As histórias de Faivl (2003) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

A Treasury of Yiddish Stories (1958) — Contributeur — 339 exemplaires
Yenne Velt: The Great Works of Jewish Fantasy and Occult (1976) — Contributeur — 327 exemplaires
The Shtetl (1979) — Contributeur — 158 exemplaires
The Oxford Book of Jewish Stories (1998) — Contributeur — 132 exemplaires
The Jewish caravan : great stories of twenty-five centuries (1935) — Contributeur, quelques éditions129 exemplaires
No Star Too Beautiful: A Treasury of Yiddish Stories (2002) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
A History of Yiddish Literature (1985) — Associated Name — 37 exemplaires
1917: Stories and Poems from the Russian Revolution (2016) — Contributeur — 35 exemplaires
Meesters der Jiddische vertelkunst (1959) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Antaeus No. 15, Autumn 1974 - Special Translation Issue (1974) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires
Fiction, Volume 2, Number 3 — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Bergelson, David
Nom légal
Бергельсон, Давид Рафаилович
Autres noms
BERGELSON, David
Date de naissance
1884-08-12
Date de décès
1952-08-12
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Russian Empire
Lieu de naissance
Okhrimovo, Ukraine
Lieu du décès
Lubyanka Prison, Moscow, USSR
Lieux de résidence
Moscow, Soviet Union
Kiev, Ukraine
Professions
novelist
playwright
literary editor
Organisations
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee
Courte biographie
Dovid Bergelson was born in Okhrimovo, Ukraine, to a well-to-do Hasidic Jewish family. He received a traditional Jewish education and also a general education from private tutors. His parents died when he was a teenager and he was raised by his older brothers. In 1903, he went to live in Kiev, which became an important center of modern Yiddish culture. He began writing in Hebrew, but these early writings were never published; he switched to Yiddish around 1907. His first novella, Arum vokzal (At the Depot; English translation, A Shtetl) was published in 1909 to favorable reviews. His novel Nokh alemen (When All Is Said and Done, 1913) was his most important contribution to the creation of the modern Yiddish novel. In 1917, he founded the avant garde Jidishe Kultur Lige (Yiddish Culture League). He also served as an editor of the literary miscellany Eygns, in which he published two of his own works, including Yoysef Shur (English translation Ashes out of Hope). The dangers of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia drove Bergelson into exile as part of an emigrant wave that included many other important writers and artists. In 1921, he settled in Berlin, where in 1922 he published the first edition of his collected works, in six volumes. He began contributing stories and journalistic reports to the Jewish Daily Forward (Forverts) in New York. In 1926, Bergelson came to believe that only the Soviet Union offered the possibility for a wider development of Yiddish literature and culture. He began writing for the Communist Yiddish press in both New York and Moscow and moved to the USSR in 1933. He wrote more novel and plays and participated in the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee during World War II. However, like many Jewish writers, he later became a target of Stalin's anti-Semitism. In 1949, he was arrested and tried secretly before being executed by a firing squad in the event known as the Night of the Murdered Poets, August 12–13, 1952. After Stalin's death, he was posthumously rehabilitated in 1955, and his complete works were published in the Soviet Union in 1961.

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Statistiques

Œuvres
33
Aussi par
13
Membres
168
Popularité
#126,679
Évaluation
½ 3.8
Critiques
1
ISBN
29
Langues
9
Favoris
1

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