OPATOSHU, JOSEPH

OPATOSHU, JOSEPH
OPATOSHU, JOSEPH (originally Opatovsky; 1886–1954), Yiddish novelist and short-story writer. Born near Mlave (Poland), Opatoshu immigrated to the U.S. in 1907, where he studied engineering at Cooper Union at night, while supporting himself by working in a shoe factory, selling newspapers, and teaching in Hebrew schools. In 1914 he graduated as a civil engineer, but soon found literature a more congenial profession. From 1910 he contributed stories to periodicals and anthologies, and in 1914 edited an anthology of his own, Di Naye Heym ("The New Home"), which included his story of American Jewish life, "Fun Nyu Yorker Geto." When the New York daily Der Tog was founded (1914), he joined its staff and for 40 years contributed stories, sketches, and serials, most of which were later reprinted in book form. Opatoshu's early work was naturalistic, depicting scenes from contemporary life. Thus his A Roman fun a Ferd Ganev ("A Novel about a Horse Thief," 1912), his first novel to attract wide attention, was based on his boyhood acquaintance with an unusual Jewish thief who made a living by smuggling horses across the border from Poland to Germany and who was killed while defending fellow Jews against their hostile neighbors. Opatoshu expressed his reaction to romanticism by creating thieves, smugglers, and drunkards who were a distinct contrast to the figures in the writings of sholem aleichem or Y.L. Peretz . Opatoshu was one of the first Yiddish writers to depict American Jewish experience in his works. After reading some of his American stories, Sholem Aleichem encouraged Opatoshu to continue writing about   the subject. Opatoshu heeded this suggestion and gave literary expression to the conflicts created by the Americanization of the Jewish immigrant in such works as Hibru ("Hebrew," 1919), a naturalistic novel that deals with the problems of Jewish education in New York; Di Tentserin ("The Dancer," 1929. portrays declining Ḥasidism in New York; Arum Grand Strit ("Around Grand Street," 1929) focuses on the immigrant Jews on the Lower East Side; and Rase ("Race," 1923), a short-story collection that portrayed the conflict between varying ethnic and religious groups. Fascinated by the Jewish past, he sought to revivify segments of it in historical novels, based on extensive research and guided by an insight, gained through Simon Dubnov's work in Jewish history, that the narrative of Jewish oppression and life in the ghetto that dominated Jewish history as written by Jews could mislead through its onesidedness. Opatoshu sought descriptions of a vital, interactive, and hopeful daily life among Jews. In his novel In Poylishe Velder (1921; In Polish Woods, 1938, the first volume of a trilogy), Opatoshu described the decay of the ḥasidic court of Kotzk during the post-Napoleonic generation and presented a rich panorama of Polish-Jewish interrelations up to the Revolt of 1863. Often reprinted, and translated into eight languages, it established Opatoshu's fame internationally, though its sequel, 1863, made less of an impact; the last volume of the trilogy, Aleyn ("Alone") was the first to be published (1919). In his Falstaffian narrative, A Tog in Regensburg ("A Day in Regensburg," 1968), and Elye Bokher (dealing with the author of the Yiddish romance, the bove buch ), both published in 1933, Opatoshu portrays the vanished world of 16th-century Jewish patricians and Yiddish minstrels in a stylized language that utilizes older stages of Yiddish. In his final historical epic, Der Letster Oyfshtand (2 vols. 1948–52; The Last Revolt, 1952), Opatoshu attempted an imaginative reconstruction of daily life in 2nd-century Judea, when the last desperate revolt of the Jews against Roman rule flared up and was crushed. His son DAVID (1919–1996) worked extensively in the Yiddish theater and starred in the classic Yiddish film Di Klyatshe/The Light Ahead (1939; adapted from S.Y. Abramovitsh 's Fiske der Krumer). Over the course of four decades he appeared in numerous Broadway productions and Hollywood films, and hundreds of television productions, winning an Emmy in 1990. He published short stories and television scripts, and directed and produced for theater, film, and television. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: Opatoshu Bibliografye, 1 (1937), 2 (1947); LYNL, 1 (1956), 145–9; B. Rivkin, Yoysef Opatoshus Gang (1948); I. Freilich, Opatoshus Shafungsveg (1951); J. Glatstein, In Tokh Genumen (1956), 145–56; S. Bickel, Shrayber fun Mayn Dor (1958), 304–16; C. Madison, Yiddish Literature (1968), 326–47; N. Mayzel, Yoysef Opatoshu (1937); S. Liptzin, Maturing of Yiddish Literature (1970), 10–18. (Sol Liptzin / Shifra Kuperman (2nd ed.)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Joseph Opatoshu — (יוסף אָפאַטאָשו in Yiddish),(1886 ndash;1954) was a Polish born Yiddish novelist and short story writer.BiographyOpatoshu was born in 1886 as Yosef Meir Opatowski to a Hasidic family, in the Polish town Mława.His father was a Jewish Maskil , who …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Opatoshu — (auch: Joseph Opatoschu oder: Józef Opatoszu, eigentlich Josef Meir Opatowski; * 1. Januar 1887 in Mława; † 7. Oktober 1954 in New York) war ein jiddischsprachiger Schriftsteller, einer der bedeutendsten Novellisten und Romanciers der jiddisch… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Opatoshu — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: David Opatoshu (1918–1996), US amerikanischer Film und Theaterschauspieler sowie Drehbuchautor Joseph Opatoshu (1887–1954), polnischer Schriftsteller Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Opatoshu, Joshua (Opatovsky, Joseph) — (1886 1954)    American Yiddish novelist, of Polish origin. He settled in the US in 1907. From 1910 he contributed stories to periodicals and anthologies. Later he joined the staff of the New York Yiddish daily paper Der tog. His novels deal… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • David Opatoshu — Born David Opatovsky January 30, 1918(1918 01 30) New York City, New York, U.S …   Wikipedia

  • David Opatoshu — (* 30. Januar 1918 in New York City, New York; † 30. April 1996 in Los Angeles, Kalifornien) war ein US amerikanischer Film und Theaterschauspieler sowie Drehbuchautor. Leben David Opatoshu entstammt einer jüdischen Familie; sein Vater war der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Le Roman d'un voleur de chevaux — Données clés Titre original Romance of a Horsethief Réalisation Abraham Polonsky Scénario David Opatoshu Acteurs principaux Yul Brynner Eli Wallach Jane Birkin Serge Gain …   Wikipédia en Français

  • YIDDISH (LANGUE, LITTÉRATURE ET THÉÂTRE) — Le yiddish est la principale langue utilisée au cours du dernier millénaire par les Juifs ashkénazes, c’est à dire les groupes juifs établis en Allemagne et en France depuis le temps de Charlemagne, en Bohême, en Pologne, en Lituanie, en Ukraine …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Épisodes d'Au cœur du temps — Série Au cœur du temps Pays d’origine États Unis Chaîne d’origine ABC Diffusion originale 9 septembre 1966 – 7 avril 1967 Nombre d’épisodes 30 Chronologie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • YIDDISH LITERATURE — This articles is arranged according to the following outline: introduction UNTIL THE END OF THE 18TH CENTURY the bible in yiddish literature epic homiletic prose drama liturgy ethical literature Historical Songs and Writings transcriptions of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”