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Renate Rubinstein (1929–1990)

Auteur de Niets te verliezen en toch bang

44+ oeuvres 612 utilisateurs 10 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Renate Rubinstein

Niets te verliezen en toch bang (1978) 85 exemplaires
Liefst verliefd (1983) 36 exemplaires
Hedendaags feminisme (1979) 29 exemplaires
Naar de bliksem? ik niet (1984) 26 exemplaires
Tijd van leven (1987) 18 exemplaires
Bange mensen stellen geen vragen (2020) 17 exemplaires
Niet de woorden maar de stem (1979) 17 exemplaires
Klein Chinees woordenboek (1975) 17 exemplaires
Toekomstmuziek (1986) 16 exemplaires
Ieder woelt hier om verandering (1979) 15 exemplaires
Twee eendjes en wat brood (1981) 15 exemplaires
Jood in Arabië, Goi in Israël (1979) 15 exemplaires
Over mijn katten (1989) 11 exemplaires
Overgangscursus (1990) 10 exemplaires
Tamarkolommen en andere berichten (1973) 8 exemplaires
Was getekend Tamar (1977) 7 exemplaires
Sta ik toevallig stil (1970) 7 exemplaires
Over de liefde (1998) 6 exemplaires
Namens Tamar 4 exemplaires
Tussen kat en mens (2006) 4 exemplaires
15 natuurverhalen (Dutch Edition) (1991) 3 exemplaires
De dagen (2011) 2 exemplaires
De onbekende Tamar 2 exemplaires
Renate Rubinstein 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

De Nederlandse en Vlaamse literatuur vanaf 1880 in 250 verhalen (2005) — Contributeur — 74 exemplaires
Verhalen uit Joods Amsterdam (1993) — Contributeur — 14 exemplaires
Vive la France : de mooiste verhalen over Frankrijk (1992) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
Boeken voor onderweg (2011) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
In kort geding. Verhalen over juristen en cliënten. (1997) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Rubinstein, Renate
Nom légal
Rubinstein, Renate Ida
Autres noms
Tamar
Date de naissance
1929-11-16
Date de décès
1990-11-23
Lieu de sépulture
Begraafplaats Zorgvlied, Amsterdam, Nederland
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Nederland
Lieu de naissance
Berlijn, Duitsland
Lieu du décès
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland
Lieux de résidence
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland
Études
University of Amsterdam
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Professions
journalist
columnist
autobiographer
essayist
memoirist
Relations
Nuis, Aad (echtg.)
Heerden, Jaap van (echtg.)
Carmiggelt, Simon (geliefde)
Leeuwen, Willem Frederik van (geliefde)
Prix et distinctions
Multatuliprijs (1979)
Courte biographie
Renate Rubinstein was born in Berlin, Germany, to a Jewish father, Alfred Rubinstein, and his wife Marie Johanne Hamm, who was not Jewish. Following the rise of the Nazi regime, the family fled to Amsterdam in 1935, and from there to London, Switzerland, and eventually back to Amsterdam.
In 1940, when she was 11 years old, her father Alfred was arrested, deported, and murdered at the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. This event would become a defining factor in Renate's life and work. She was allowed to attended gymnasium (high school) during the German occupation in World War II because of her non-Jewish mother, but did not complete her schooling. After the war, she worked at the publishing company G.A. van Oorschot, and lived with lawyer (and future mayor of Amsterdam) Willem Frederik van Leeuwen. She then worked at a kibbutz in Israel for three years, and studied at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem for an additional two years. In 1955, she was accepted at the University of Amsterdam, and studied political and social sciences for two years, then dropped out to begin her career as a journalist and writer, first for the Nieuw Israëlitische Weekblad (New Israelite Weekly) and Propria Cures. Later, she wrote for Vrij Nederland (Free Netherlands, a weekly magazine), Avenue (a monthly magazine), Hollands Weekblad (Holland Weekly), and the literary magazine Tirade, among others. Her weekly column in Vrij Nederland, which appeared from 1962 under the pseudonym Tamar, focused on topics as varied as world politics, Dutch affairs, and her personal life; they were extremely popular. Her bold statements often provoked heated national debates. Namens Tamar, the first collection of her columns in book form, appeared in 1964. Her 1978 account of her divorce, Nothing to Lose and Yet Afraid, was a bestseller and is considered an international classic work. She published some 25 other books and was awarded the Multatuli Prize for literature in 1979.
She was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1977, which she discussed in her book Nee heb je (English translation Take It or Leave It, 1985). In 1982, she delivered the prestigious Huizinga Lecture in Leiden on "Left and Right in Politics and Life."
She was married to literary critic Aad Nuis and to psychologist and columnist Jaap van Heerden. Her posthumously-published memoir Mijn beter ik (My Better Self, 1991), revealed a secret liaison with the late Dutch writer Simon Carmiggelt. In 2020, 30 years after her death, an anthology of Renate's work was published containing her columns, lectures, and letters, under the title Bange mensen stellen geen vragen (Only the Courageous Ask Questions).

Membres

Critiques

More columns or short essays by Renate Rubinstein. Throughout the 1980s and 90s the Dutch would often protest or turn against decisions made in the context of greater alliances such as NATO or the forerunners of the EU. This resistance to giving up (part of) sovereignty was dubbed "the Dutch disease". Treaties were held up but never fully rejected, and resistance was always democratic.

Renate Rubinstein saw this very early. These 12 columns were all written between October 1981 and March 1982. They are mainly about the Peace Movement and the Dutch resistance against the stationing of nuclear arms in the light of the Cold War.

Now all but forgotten, these essays may merely serve as a reminder that mass resistance actually works, a reminder for younger generations who have never felt the need to fight for their rights.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
edwinbcn | Feb 18, 2024 |
Although the columns and short essays written by Renate Rubinstein were all published under the name Tamar in the same newspaper, collections of these essays appeared in book form with different publishers. Some of these collections focused on a specific topic. For instance, the essays in Niets te verliezen en toch bang mainly deal with separation, including divorce, while Hedendaags feminisme deals with feminism and emancipation.

Niet de woorden maar de stem appeared in the Salamander series of E.M. Querido's publishing house. This collection of essays is more personal. The first, and longest piece is about the Provo movement of hippies that roamed Amsterdam during the 1960s and 70s. The other pieces are about the writer's home, personal relationships and about her chamber plants.

This collection is a reedited version of a broader collection previously published under the title Tamarkolommen en andere berichten.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
edwinbcn | Feb 17, 2024 |
Many if not most of Renate Rubinstein's book publications are selections of columns, short essays, she wrote for Dutch weekly newspapers. Many of these mini essays are reflections on what mattered to her, hence many are about love, or feminism. Niets te verliezen en toch bang consists of a number of mini essays about divorce. Possibly because the author was profoundly struck, this collections seems better or more heartfelt than some of her other books, which sometimes appear frivolous. And while some of her books, for instance about emancipation and feminism seem dated, this book still strikes a cord. In a foreword by the author she writes that this is a selection out of many other pieces on the same topic. Perhaps, due to strict selection, the overall stylistic quality of this publication is also high. I enjoyed it more than some of her other books.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
edwinbcn | 1 autre critique | Feb 4, 2024 |
Renate Rubinstein writes very well and in 1979, when this book was published, it gave all the top of the bill arguments in favour of emancipation and feminism.
½
 
Signalé
edwinbcn | Jan 3, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
44
Aussi par
7
Membres
612
Popularité
#41,086
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
10
ISBN
75
Langues
3
Favoris
1

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