63 résultats
194613981Lodzsh: Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn 1946. 1st edition. Later cloth with original dramatic photgraphic cover mounted on front 8vo 70 1 pages 1 l. includes facsimiles. 21 cm. Poems. "Oysgabes fun Der Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn. Serye yidishe literatur 1." <br> A committee dedicated to recording the fate of Polish Jews published this book length poem by Simkhah Szajewics. Written in the Lodz Ghetto it appeared immediately after the war in 1946; Szajewicz perished in a concentration camp in 1944" from the permanent exhibit at the National Yiddish Book Center which houses their copy in their Rare Book Collection. <br> The book actually includes two long poems: "Lekh-lekha" and "Friling 702 " as well as letters and other related material. <br> See David Roskies interesting reflection on this work and it's stunning photographic cover at jtsa.edu/torah/go-forth-the-grammar-of-remembrance. <br> For more about the author-poet see Chava rosenfarb's essay on Shayevitch in Tablet Magazine at tabletmag.com/sections/arts-letters/articles/the-last-poet-of-lodz. SUBJECTS: Jews -- Persecutions -- Poland -- Lódz. Holocaust Jewish 1939-1945 -- Poetry. Jews -- Correspondence. Expertly rebound in attractive black cloth with the original photographic front cover mounted on the front. Very Good Condition. B HOLO2-110-36-CCALX-'emm H-40-10. Lodzsh: Tsentraler Yidisher Historisher Komisye baym Tsentral-Komitet fun Poylishe Yidn unknown
67203E-363. Very Good. Hardcover. Hardcover. 8vo. Published by Harper & Row New York 1966. Xi 90 pgs. Illustrated. First Edition/First Printing. DJ has light shelf-wear present to the DJ extremities lower right corner of the DJ is clipped but price is still present to the top of the front flap. Bound in decorated cloth boards with titles present to the spine and front board. Boards have light shelf-wear present to the extremities. No ownership marks present. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer introduces readers to the village of Chelm in this Newbery Honor Book. Chelm is a village of fools. The most famous foolsthe oldest and the greatestare the seven Elders. But there are lesser fools too: a silly irresponsible bridegroom; four sisters who mix up their feed in bed one night; a young man who imagines himself dead. Here are seven magical folktales spun by a master storyteller that speak of fools devils schlemiels and even heroeslike Zlateh the goat. ; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . hardcover
74096E-091. Hardcover. Very Good. Hardcover. 8vo. Published by Harper & Row New York 1966. Xi 90 pgs. Illustrated. First Edition/First Printing. DJ has light shelf-wear present to the DJ extremities lower right corner of the DJ is clipped but price is still present to the top of the front flap. Bound in decorated cloth boards with titles present to the spine and front board. Boards have light shelf-wear present to the extremities. No ownership marks present. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer introduces readers to the village of Chelm in this Newbery Honor Book. Chelm is a village of fools. The most famous fools—the oldest and the greatest—are the seven Elders. But there are lesser fools too: a silly irresponsible bridegroom; four sisters who mix up their feed in bed one night; a young man who imagines himself dead. Here are seven magical folktales spun by a master storyteller that speak of fools devils schlemiels and even heroes—like Zlateh the goat.; 8vo 8" - 9" tall . hardcover
196528615New York: Harper & Row 1965. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good in a Very Good dust jacket edges taped. Harper & Row hardcover
190443110Varsha Warsaw: Ferlag "Progress 1904. First edition. Original illustrated printed boards 8vo 162 32 pages plus 7 unnumbered leaves of plates with illustrations. 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Yearbook ‘Progress’: A Journal for Literature Science and Criticism.â€<br> “Abraham Reisen was a Yiddish poet short-story writer playwright and editor…While he was still a teenager his talent was recognized by Shalom Aleichem and I.L. Peretz who arranged for the publication of his earliest poems. After some years in Minsk Warsaw Krakow and Berlin he settled permanently in New York in 1914. Influenced by Heinrich Heine whom he translated into Yiddish he was one of the first Yiddish poets to make use of folksong material. His poetry though mostly written in conventional quatrains is suffused by a refined sensibility that adumbrates the writing of Di Yunge.†Jewish Virtual Library<br> â€In 1900 Yakov Lidski founded "Progress" publishing house. Its name clearly communicated its goal. This publishing company considered to be the first to deal with modern Yiddish literature published a series of original and translated popular science books along with translated European literature and original Yiddish literature. The first editor of the publishing house was poet Avrom Reyzen.†Wikipedia. <br> SUBJECTS: Yiddish literature. Jews -- Poland -- Periodicals. OCLC: 21651882<br> Wear to spine some page separation toning and markings. About Good Condition. YID-46-28-GGLEX-’cc. Varsha [Warsaw]: Ferlag "Progress unknown
190643217London: "Arbayter fraynd 1906. First Yiddish edition. Period boards 8vo xiii 426 pages 19 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Words from a Revolutionary.â€<br> Translation of “Paroles d'un re´volte´.†Includes translation of the forewords by the author and Elise´e Reclus. Includes bibliographical references.<br> “During his long exile Kropotkin wrote a series of influential works the most important being ‘Paroles d’un révolté’ 1885; “Words of a Rebelâ€.Kropotkin’s aim as he often remarked was to provide anarchism with a scientific basis. In Mutual Aid which is widely regarded as his masterpiece he argued that despite the Darwinian concept of the survival of the fittest cooperation rather than conflict is the chief factor in the evolution of species. Providing abundant examples he showed that sociability is a dominant feature at every level of the animal world. <br> Among humans too he found that mutual aid has been the rule rather than the exception. He traced the evolution of voluntary cooperation from the primitive tribe peasant village and medieval commune to a variety of modern associations—trade unions learned societies the Red Cross—that have continued to practice mutual support despite the rise of the coercive bureaucratic state. The trend of modern history he believed was pointing back toward decentralized nonpolitical cooperative societies in which people could develop their creative faculties without interference from rulers clerics or soldiers.â€<br> SUBJECTS: Anarchism. OCLC: 19303211.<br> Ex-library with early 19th Century left-wing library markings see photos. Good- Condition YID-48-41-LXCCGG-’e. London: "Arbayter fraynd unknown
190643219London: "Arbayter fraynd 1906. First Yiddish edition. Period boards 8vo xiii 426 pages 19 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Words from a Revolutionary.â€<br> Translation of “Paroles d'un re´volte´.†Includes translation of the forewords by the author and Elise´e Reclus. Includes bibliographical references.<br> “During his long exile Kropotkin wrote a series of influential works the most important being ‘Paroles d’un révolté’ 1885; “Words of a Rebelâ€.Kropotkin’s aim as he often remarked was to provide anarchism with a scientific basis. In Mutual Aid which is widely regarded as his masterpiece he argued that despite the Darwinian concept of the survival of the fittest cooperation rather than conflict is the chief factor in the evolution of species. Providing abundant examples he showed that sociability is a dominant feature at every level of the animal world. <br> Among humans too he found that mutual aid has been the rule rather than the exception. He traced the evolution of voluntary cooperation from the primitive tribe peasant village and medieval commune to a variety of modern associations—trade unions learned societies the Red Cross—that have continued to practice mutual support despite the rise of the coercive bureaucratic state. The trend of modern history he believed was pointing back toward decentralized nonpolitical cooperative societies in which people could develop their creative faculties without interference from rulers clerics or soldiers.â€<br> SUBJECTS: Anarchism. OCLC: 19303211.<br> Spine is taped.Tight binding but text block is clean and intact. Good Condition YID-48-40-LXCCGG-’e. London: "Arbayter fraynd unknown
193735363New York; Posy-Shoulson Press 1937. 1st edition. Original Wraps. 4to. 4 171 2 23 pages. 28 cm. In Yiddish with English section and title page: Ten years Artef; published for the tenth anniversary of the Artef March 1937. <br> Extensively illustrated publication for the tenth year anniversary of the radical Yiddish theatre company Artef:<br> "the radical Yiddish dramatic troupe based in New York during the heyday of the Yiddish theater in America. Begun in the mid-1920s as a study group of amateur worker-actors at one time there were nine separate studios with over 120 students in the 1930s the troupe went professional putting on at least two and often three new plays per season. With such plays as Jacob Mostel 's Strike Shmuel Godiner 's Jim Kooperkop Avrum Vevioka 's Diamonds and Maxim Gorky 's Egor Bulychev and Dostigaev and Others Artef spread propaganda to the masses. Ideologically Artef was far left; its hope was a Communist society here in America. As a troupe its role was 'agit-prop' to agitate and propagandize to serve as the cultural representative of radical workers. In fact most of its tickets were pre-sold through worker unions and at least in its early years Artef gave presentations at political events.<br> Its first large-scale production was Mass Play and Ballet of the Russian Revolution which appeared at the Lenin memorial celebration in Madison Square Garden on January 21 1928. <br> Artef 's greatest artistic and commercial successes were connected with the talented productions of director Benno Schneider. Schneider who had been active in the Zionist Habima troupe in Moscow wed aesthetic excellence to revolutionary ideology with his interpretation of Aristocrats an adaptation of Sholem Aleichem 's Mentshn. Incidentally Schneider earned such a positive reputation with Artef that he received offers to direct on Broadway a promotion that cost the radical Yiddish theater dearly. <br> The end of the Artef was gradual and its causes were closely associated with the reduced role of Yiddish in American life. But there were bright lights before the darkness. During the 'days of the Popular Front ' when the Communists formed associations with less radical leftist parties the Artef attracted a larger audience which led to an optimistic expansion that later was responsible for huge financial losses. The darkness occurred at the end of the thirties when the number of Yiddish speakers began to diminish. The last performance of the Artef was on July 7 1941." Review by Dr. Brian Horowitz of 'Yiddish Proletarian Theatre: The Art and Politics of the Artef 1925–1940 ' written by Edna Nahshon. <br> Many of the actors and directors in Artef went on to establish solid careers on Broadway Hollywood and for those blacklisted overseas. <br> Bound in brown velour wraps with gilt title. Heavily illustrated. <br> Subjects: Arbeiter theatre verband New York. Jewish theater. Theater - New York State - New York. Artef - Anniversaries etc. <br> OCLC: 19310798. <br> Light wear to edges of wraps otherwise clean and fresh. Good condition. B YID-22-9-LEBWW. New York; Posy-Shoulson Press unknown
63424743University of Wisconsin Press pp. 408 Maps . Papeback. New. University of Wisconsin Press unknown
KSX-1YD-LOOFine. Visually Inspected by Owner: Paperback as pictured no marks in text and binding solid. 3rd edition 2003. Old and New Testament. Bible was not used a couple of very minor minor small crease on a couple of pages from storing. We ship M-F at 4pm and Sat. at 12 pm with tracking info. paperback
64208974McGill-Queen's University Press pp. xxv 362 . Hardback. New. McGill-Queen's University Press hardcover
19461116373New York: Jewish Encyclopedic Handbooks Central Yiddish Culture Organization CYCO. Fine maroon leatherbound 2 volume set gilt all edges Volume 1 has 430 pp with B/W illustrations; Volume 2 has 430 pp with B/W illustrations. . Fine. Leather Bound. 1946. Jewish Encyclopedic Handbooks Central Yiddish Culture Organization (CYCO hardcover
193855712New York: I. L. Peretz Yiddish Writers' Union 1938. First edition Ex-Library. Hardcover. Good- to good condition. Quarto. 397 3pp. Original light brown clpthe with black lettering on cover and spine. Title pages in Yiddish and English. Scarce work being a survey of immigrant societies in New York. Includes essays on landsmanshaft history and activities as well as survey results in Yiddish; also contains the Directory of Organizations in English. A comprehensive survey of Jewish support groups organized by the community. Text in Yiddish with some English. Biding with some light wear along edges slightly pronounced at head and tail of spine lightly rubbed. Library sticker on spine library bookplate on inside front cover. Blind-stamped on title-page. Lightly starting after title page starting at second back endpaper before English title page. Typed note describing content on free endpaper. Libary barcode on inside back cover. Block lightly age-toned. I. L. Peretz Yiddish Writers' Union hardcover
193828020New York: I. L. Peretz Yiddish Writers' Union 1938. First edition. Hardcover. g. Quarto. 397 3pp. Rebacked with blue library tape over original cloth with Yiddish lettering on front cover. Title pages in Yiddish and English. Scarce work being a survey of immigrant societies in New York. Includes essays on landsmanshaft history and activities as well as survey results in Yiddish; also contains the Directory of Organizations in English. Age-wear on binding with original spine replaced by library blue tape and heavy rubbing along edges. Previous owner's stamps on both endpapers. Age-toning along paper margin. Text in Yiddish with some English. Binding in overall fair interior in good condition. I. L. Peretz Yiddish Writers' Union hardcover
1974500528New York: Hebrew Union College Press and Ktav Publishing House 1974. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 4to. An excellent ex-synagogue-library copy with lean to spine and suggestion of foxing to top edge only. Text clean and bright. Binding tight. Montreal Books rating system: 1. Fine 2. Near Fine 3. Very Good 4. Good 5. Fair . Hebrew Union College Press and Ktav Publishing House Hardcover
1926biblio39295New York: Boni and Liveright; First Edition 1926. 145 pp 2 pp musical score. Good Hardcover no dj. DarkCyan cloth. Remnant of the Spine title label. No Wear to the cover. Soiled Endpapers. Clean Unmarked text. Strong Tight binding and hinges. 7.8"x5.25"x0.9". be27491. Boni and Liverigh hardcover
1912224381912. Schwartz Isidor Publisher. Vi Azoy Tsu Veren a Sitizen. / The Citizen: A Guide to Naturalization. All Important Questions and Answers Printed in Hebrew and Yiddish Also Translations in Plain English Which You are to Know When Applying for Your Final Citizen Papers. Brooklyn: Aroysgegeben fun Isidor Schwartz / Published by Isidor Schwartz n.d. after 1912. Only edition. 31 page. Text in English and Yiddish both transliterated and Hebrew script. 6" x 4.5. Stapled pamphlet in printe wrappers.<br /> <br /> An immigrant-era Yiddish-English naturalization guide for Jewish immigrants preparing to become U.S. citizens published by Isidor Schwartz in Brooklyn. This vernacular instructional manual contains sample questions and answers in three formats: English Yiddish in Hebrew script and transliterated English in Latin script referred to on the cover as "Jewish-English". Designed for oral preparation it walks new arrivals through both general and localized questions commonly asked at the naturalization interview particularly for applicants in New York. Questions range from general American civics-"How does a bill become a law"-to specific regional knowledge-"What is the capital of New York State" and "How many stars has the American flag" The answer is noted as "Forty-eight stars" dating the publication to after Arizona and New Mexico's 1912 admission but before Alaska and Hawaii. The phrasing used-"We vote for the candidate who is in our opinion best fitted to occupy the office he wishes to be elected to"-illustrates the pamphlet's focus on simplified phonetic civic literacy.<br /> <br /> A vital artifact of Jewish immigrant life and Americanization in the early 20th century this pamphlet exemplifies how Jewish community publishers mediated state bureaucracies for recent arrivals. Yiddish language guides like this one offered more than instruction-they were part of the infrastructure of mutual aid and cultural transition particularly within New York's dense immigrant communities.<br /> <br /> Fragile condition with moderate chipping and edgewear to front and rear wrappers including some closed tears and loss at corners; interior pages clean and legible. Overall good condition. A scarce and historically significant publication supporting Jewish American integration during a peak period of Yiddish-speaking immigration; OCLC locates only 8 institutional holdings worldwide. unknown
19361iCg0016New York: Alfred A. Knopf Inc. 1936. Book. Good. Decorative Cloth. 3rd Printing Oct. 1936. 8vo or 8° Medium Octavo: 7¾" x 9¾" tall. 642 numbered pages. Solidly bound copy with moderate external wear. Clean text. Book could easily pass as 'very good' considering its age. Moderate foxing on endpapers and page edges. There is no dj. Third printing October 1936. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Hardcover
195932876New York: Celia Adler Foundation / Shulsinger Bros. Linotyping & Publishing Co 1959. Very Good/Very Good. New York: Celia Adler Foundation / Shulsinger Bros. Linotyping & Publishing Co. 1959. First Edition. Two octavo volumes 23.5cm; 688pp. Black and white photographs. Photo-illustrated dust jackets; blue cloth boards. Yiddish-language text throughout. Dust jackets show mild chipping with a few short tears along edges; general rubbing and sun-fading. Old damp-marks to board edges of both volumes causing discoloration to cloth but no structural damage. Bindings sound. Glue residue to endpapers of volume II else unmarked and still a Very Good set of this uncommon autobiography of "The First Lady of Yiddish Theater." Adler was known for creating leading roles in Yiddish versions of many classic plays and was the first actor to portray a Holocaust survivor in her brother Luther's 1946 Broadway production A Flag is Born. Scarce. Celia Adler Foundation / Shulsinger Bros. Linotyping & Publishing Co unknown
196562414New York: Sam Liptzin Book Committee 1965. 272p. first edition illus. dj slightly shelfworn hint of foxing on top-edge of text block board corners minorly bumped else in very good condition. Signed and inscribed by the author to a friend. Sam Liptzin Book Committee unknown
192743261Vilne: Tamar 1927. First edition. Original boards. 8vo 220 pages 21 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as “Storm Winds: Images from Yiddish History in the 17th Century.â€<br> Max Weinreich’s historical work on Jews in Europe in the 17th Century focusing on the Chmelnitski pogroms.<br> “While Weinreich was first and foremost a linguist other topics he wrote about included psychology he translated Freud into Yiddish sociology economics theater studies literary history education ethnography and philosophy. He had a second career as a writer of popular articles in the Yiddish Forward frequently under the unlikely pseudonym Sore Brener. His linguistic interests included the history of linguistics orthography grammar he coauthored an early Yiddish grammar etymology and the etymological components of Yiddish dialectology stylistics and the influence of traditional Jewish culture in all its facets on the development of the Yiddish language.<br> In 1925 on the initiative of the linguist Nokhem Shtif the Yidisher Visnshaftlekher Institut Yiddish Research Institute; YIVO was founded in Berlin and began its work in Vilna; its first headquarters was located in a room in Weinreich’s apartment. Weinreich quickly became the driving force behind the new institute which was originally to have been known as an academy but Weinreich insisted on institute. Although YIVO may not have been Weinreich’s brainchild it was his child in every other way even after it acquired its own building on Wiwulski Street in Vilna.†<br> SUBJECTS: Jews -- Poland -- History -- Persecutions. Chmelnicki massacres. Blood accusation -- Lithuania -- Vilnius. Blood accusation. Jews -- Persecutions. History. OCLC: 649090568. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide AJHS SUNY- Albany YIVO AJU Stanford Harvard NYBC Penn<br> Spine separation and some markings but text block is in good condition. Good Condition. Important and somewhat scarce. YID-48-62-BX'L-’emccgg. Vilne: Tamar unknown
192936164Vilne: Vilner Farlag B. Kletskin 1929. Hardcover. g. Quarto. Vol. 2: 8 516 XXVII. Black buckram with gold lettering on front. Blind stamp borders on spine with red text boxes. Blind stamp symbol and lettering on back boards. Brown decorative endpapers b/w photographic facsimile plates and cuts throughout. Includes articles about the history of Yiddish theater Slavic influences on Yiddish burial customs early German thief jargon and Yiddish surnames in Ukraine. Additional title pages and summaries in English. Slight wearing on edges and ends. Top of spine torn. Slight age toning. Binding and interior in good condition. Text in Yiddish. Vilner Farlag B. Kletskin hardcover
19387471NY: Academy Photo Offset Inc. Very Good in Good dust jacket. 1938. First Edition Thus. 1. Hard Cover. Publisher's full burgundy cloth Hebrew lettering gilt on cover. title page in color. Illustrated with fine etchings by Saul Raskin Text in English and Hebrew. Covers very lightly soiled Hebrew inscriptions on ffep very mildly shelf-worn else fine. The dust jacket now in Mylar is moderately chipped with some loss at the head of the spine. All of the etchings are in bright clean condition. VERY GOOD/VERY GOOD. . Etchings. 4to 11" - 13" tall. 124 2 pp . Academy Photo Offset, Inc. hardcover
2005L3 box729 a5<p>On Long Winter Nights…: Memoirs of a Jewish Family in a Galician Township 1870–190 Harvard Center for Jewish Studies. By Hinde Bergner; Translated from the Yiddish edited and with an introduction by Justin Daniel Cammy. 2005 by Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies Harvard University Press. Hardcover 122 pp.</p> Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies, Harvard University Press. hardcover
193443320Nyu York New York: Farlag Signal 1934. Original illustrated paper wrappers 8vo 190 pages including illustrations. 20 cm In Yiddish. The title translates as “Underground†or “Success.â€<br> Nazi-era Poetry and fiction by Yosl Cutler with illustrations by the author. <br> “A mish-mosh of wildly creative stories and illustrations by Yosl Cutler one of the most original and unique characters in Yiddish cultural life. Includes one of the first Yiddish science fiction stories ‘Afn shtern mars’ On the Planet Mars as well as a great deal of left wing political work in prose poem and cartoon.†Yiddish Book Center. <br> “Cutler was born in Troyanets Volhynia. He studied in religious elementary school. He was orphaned in his youth and at age eleven he became a server in a tavern. He mastered sign painting and in 1911 departed for the United States. He pursued his study of painting and in 1925 he created with the artists Zuni Maud and Jack Tworkov a Yiddish marionette theater called “Modicut†which proved successful in the United States and Europe but didn’t last long because of the great expenses involved. Under the influence of Moyshe Nadir in 1922 he began writing poetry humorous sketches stories and short plays… Of his short plays that were published in journals: Di sokhrim fun fefer Merchants of pepper; Der kindermark The children’s market; and Mayn filozofisher vesher My philosophical laundry; among others. In book form: Muntergang Success New York 1934 190 pp. ‘Yosl Kotler worked in three realms’ wrote M. Olgin ‘which merged into one: writer of humor cartoonist and marionette operator.’ He died in Memphis.†Leksikon Fun Der Nayer Yidisher Literatur<br> SUBJECTS: Yiddish wit and humor. Jewish wit and humor. Short stories Yiddish. Yiddish drama. OCLC: 23578196<br> Clean copy with some worn edges. Good Condition YID-48-75-MLX-’ggecc. Nyu York [New York]: Farlag Signal unknown