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Anzia Yezierska

    29 oktober 1880 – 21 november 1970

    Anzia Yezierska's proza vangt de immigrantenervaring krachtig, puttend uit haar eigen strijd met armoede en culturele ontworteling in de Lower East Side van New York. Haar verhalen ontleden de spanning tussen traditionele verwachtingen en het felle streven naar vrouwelijke autonomie, en bieden een onverbloemde kijk op het leven van vrouwen uit de arbeidersklasse. Als stem voor de gemarginaliseerden verkent Yezierska's werk thema's als identiteit, de hardheid van klassevooroordelen en de meedogenloze zoektocht naar zelfdefinitie. Haar schrijfstijl, gevormd door persoonlijke ontberingen en intellectuele betrokkenheid, biedt een rauwe en vitale verkenning van de Amerikaanse droom.

    All I Could Never Be
    Bread Givers
    Hungry Hearts
    • Hungry Hearts

      • 136bladzijden
      • 5 uur lezen
      3,8(271)Tarief

      Exploring the European Jewish immigrant experience, this collection of short stories presents the struggles of fictional female characters facing poverty in early 20th-century New York City. Each narrative highlights unique challenges and resilience, capturing the essence of their lives and cultural identity. Originally published in 1920, these poignant tales reflect the broader themes of hardship and hope within the immigrant community. The stories have also inspired a film adaptation, further extending their impact and relevance.

      Hungry Hearts
    • Bread Givers

      • 334bladzijden
      • 12 uur lezen
      3,8(5683)Tarief

      Only if they cooked for men, and washed for men, and didn't nag and curse the men out of their homes: only if they let the men study the Torah in peace, then, maybe, they could push themselves into heaven with the men, to wait on them there.

      Bread Givers
    • All I Could Never Be

      • 256bladzijden
      • 9 uur lezen

      In this heartfelt novel, written in 1932, Fanya Ivanowna, a Polish Jew from New York’s Lower East Side, meets Henry Scott, a well-bred professor who first helps her fulfill her ambition to become a writer, then falls in love with her—but only to change his mind and rebuff her socially.  Fanya is hurt, but instead of returning to the ghetto to live among “her own people,” as so many have done before her, she decides to continue to better herself, to become more American.  She moves to a small New England town, where she meets her soulmate, a non-Jewish Polish immigrant, and prepares to make a home.             A moving portrait of an indomitable immigrant woman, as well as an early and optimistic story of Jewish assimilation and inter-marriage, with an introduction by Dr. Catherine Rottenberg, who places the book within the context of Yezierska’s work and Jewish American history.

      All I Could Never Be