535 résultats
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 256, [8] pages. 24 cm. First edition. In Hebrew. A study of the religious life of the communities bordering on Hungary and Rumania, with many documents concerning the rabbinate. Subjects: Jews - Romania - Transylvania. Jews - Romania - History. OCLC lists 25 copies. Pages aged, light wear to edges of cloth, overall fresh and clean. Good condition. (EE-5-11)
brossura A cura di Rudi Assuntino. In brossura condizioni ottime.
Brossura commerciale datata, comuni sgualciture e minime sbucciature da contatto segnano la copertina in cartonato millerighe, con patinato ombrato da polvere da scaffale, fogli e tagli in calda tonalità avorio, in buina parte puliti e ben preservati, cura di Rudi Assuntino, trascrizioni musicali di C. Montanaro, trascrizione dallo yiddish, trad. e glossario di Laura Quercioli Mincer. N. pag. 221. USATO
BILINGUAL YIDDISH-FRENCH EDITION. 22x14.5 cm. 139+160 pages. Softcover. Cover corners slightly wrinkled and slightly worn. Spine slightly rubbed. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
Softbound. 8vo. 221, [8] pages. 24 cm. First edition. In French. Birobidjan, a Jewish land of the USSR. With 8 pages of color photographs of Birobidjan from the late 1980s. Subjects: Jews - Russia (Federation) - Birobidzhan. Juifs - Russie - Région autonome des Juifs. Birobidzhan (Russia) Birobidjan (URSS ; région autonome juive) . Light wear to wraps and edges, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (EE-5-44)
DISPONIBILITÀ GARANTITA AL 99%; SPEDIZIONE ENTRO 12 ORE DALL'ORDINE. ANCORA IMBALLATO, NUOVO: POSSIBILI LIEVI SEGNI DEL TEMPO. Pubblicato nel 1947, a soli due anni dalla fine della guerra e nel paranoico clima del maccartismo, La vittima racconta di Asa Leventhal, quarantenne borghese ebreo di New York che, in un'estate dalla calura opprimente e in un momento delicato della propria vita familiare, incontra per caso un vecchio conoscente, Kirby Allbee. Costui lo accusa di essere la causa delle proprie disgrazie e inizia a molestarlo, fino a perseguitarlo in maniera ossessiva. In un crescendo di tensione, e in un dramma dell'identità nel quale i due personaggi incarnano alternativamente il ruolo del persecutore e della vittima, Leventhal esamina a fondo la propria responsabilità e il proprio senso di colpa (che è poi il sentimento degli ebrei americani rimasti indenni - a differenza di quelli europei - dallo sterminio), con un passaggio dal piano contingente e privato a quello storico-sociale e mistico-esistenziale. Informazioni bibliografiche Titolo: La vittima Titolo originale dell'opera: The Victim Collana: Volume 843 di Universale economica Autore: Saul Bellow Traduzione di: Maria Luisa Spaziani Editore: Milano: Feltrinelli, 1978 ISBN: 8804617438, 9788804617433 Lunghezza: 296 pagine, 18 cm Soggetti: Letteratura americana, Narrativa contemporanea in inglese, Novecento, Romanzi, Ebrei, Antisemitismo, Nazismo, Herzog, Shoah, yiddish
In-16 (cm. 18.90), cartonato editoriale, sovracoperta editoriale illustrata (piccoli strappi), pp. 333, (19). In buono stato di conservazione (good copy).
prefazione di Gad Lerne, edizione ampliata
Milano, Feltrinelli, 2002, 8vo brossura con copertina illustrata, pp. 230.
Mm 140x215 Collana "La Gaja Scienza" - Traduzione di Mario Biondi. Volume nella sua brossura originale, 221 pagine. Copia in ottime condizioni, mai letta; spedizione in 24 ore dalla conferma dell'ordine.
in-16, 266 pp., illustrations, broche, couverture illustrée.- 9782266034944 Bel exemplaire [PP-1]
583, [1] pp.; 21,5 cm. Bross. edit. Firma di proprietà alla prima pag. bianca. Buono
Mm 140x210 Collana "Gli Adelphi" - Brossura originale, 498 pagine con un glossario in chiusura. Buona copia, spedizione in 24 ore dalla conferma dell'ordine.
Version castellana conforme a la tradicion judia por Moises Katznelson. [Volume 2 of set] Parallel texts in Hebrew and Spanish. 660p. Handsome leather style binding with spine title embossed in gold Book
Version castellana conforme a la tradicion judia por Moises Katznelson. [Volume I of set- will not be sold separately] Parallel texts in Hebrew and Spanish. 660p. Handsome leather style binding with spine title embossed in gold Book
1st edition. Original cloth in dust jacket. 8vo. 231 pages. Illustrated. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews Lithuania history; Haskalah Lithuania history. SERIES: Dos Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70; Variation: Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70. Born in Warsaw, Shatzky [1893-1956] received his doctorate in 1922 for a dissertation on 19th-century Polish-Jewish history. During World War I he served as an officer in the Polish Legion. From 1913 on he wrote Polish articles and reviews on Jewish literary and historical subjects. He came to write mainly in Yiddish after 1922, the year he settled in the U. S. Where he was one of the founders of the U. S. Section of YIVO. From 1929 until his death he was librarian of the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Shatzky's range was extraordinarily wide: Spinoza, psychiatry, theater, music, folklore, literature, language, and other areas. His principal field, however, was Eastern European Jewish history, and his major work was his history of Warsaw Jewry. He was an indefatigable and often querulous reviewer of scholarly works; the quality and accuracy of his own historical scholarship has often been questioned. (Prager, EJ) Has tanned dust jacket and sewn in ribbon bookmark. Very good condition in good jacket. (YIZ-8-5)
1st edition. Original cloth in dust jacket. 8vo. 231 pages. Illustrated. In Yiddish. SUBJECT (S) : Jews Lithuania history; Haskalah Lithuania history. SERIES: Dos Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70; Variation: Poylishe Yidntum ; ; bd. 70. Born in Warsaw, Shatzky [1893-1956] received his doctorate in 1922 for a dissertation on 19th-century Polish-Jewish history. During World War I he served as an officer in the Polish Legion. From 1913 on he wrote Polish articles and reviews on Jewish literary and historical subjects. He came to write mainly in Yiddish after 1922, the year he settled in the U. S. Where he was one of the founders of the U. S. Section of YIVO. From 1929 until his death he was librarian of the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Shatzky's range was extraordinarily wide: Spinoza, psychiatry, theater, music, folklore, literature, language, and other areas. His principal field, however, was Eastern European Jewish history, and his major work was his history of Warsaw Jewry. He was an indefatigable and often querulous reviewer of scholarly works; the quality and accuracy of his own historical scholarship has often been questioned. (Prager, EJ) Has tanned dust jacket and sewn in ribbon bookmark. Very good condition in very good jacket. A gorgeous copy (YIZ-8-5) x
New York, Workmen's Circle, 1978. Paper Wrappers, 4to, 32 pages. In Yiddish. Bimontly (i. E. 6 times per year) . On the activies of the Workmans Circle/Arbayter Ring. OCLC lists 9 holdings worldwide. Very Good Condition. (Y-1-17) Price is per issue
1st edition. Original black cloth with modernist gold lettering, initialed B.B. in the plate. 8vo, 96 pages. 21 cm. In Yiddish. Title page in classic interwar modernist typefacePoems by the great Yiddish poet, Yaakov Glatshteyn (1896-1971). Born in Poland, Glatshteyn became a modernist Yiddish poet who immigrated to the United States. in 1919, together with Aaron Glanz,and N.B. Minkoff, he founded the In-Zikh ("Introspectivist") movement of Yiddish poetry and the literary organ In Zikh for the propagation of the Inzikhist credo. SUBJECT(S): Yiddish poetry. Poe´sie. OCLC: 19309093. Bits of paper from original dust jacket stuck to bottom edge of of cloth, with some related staining, otherwise Very Good Condition. (YID-42-37-++)
IN HEBREW, YIDDISH AND ENGLISH. 25x18cm. LXI+357 pages. Gilt hardcover. Spine slightly faded. Else in good condition.
1st edition. Stiff Wrappers, 4to, 8-36 pages each issue. In Yiddish. Daily writeups from the Workmens Circle Annual convention, here bound together with the annual joke issue, "Der Bezem, " a kind of April Fools Day-like response to the convention. This is not a kind of post-convention wrap-up, but rather daily news for the delegates as it unfolds. Most issues include numerous cartoons, photos, etc. Important Depression-era volume. "Aroysgegebn fun der konvenshon arandzshments komite; redagirt fun F. Gelibter un L. Ratman." Presume given only to delegates and not published and distributed further afield. We were unable to locate a single holding of this volumes anywhere, and only 3 holdings of any other volumes of it (Harvard, Brandeis, Illinois). SUBJECT(S) Jews -- United States - Congresses. Workmen's Circle (U. S. ) -- Congresses. Very Good Condition. Rare. (Y-4)
1st edition. Original boards with gilt lettering. 8vo. 96 pages, 25 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates to Candlewicks. Asselin (1889-1974) was a prominent Russian-American poet. He published hundreds of poems in Yiddish and his work was featured in the biggest Yiddish newspapers of his day. The Judaica Section of Harvard currently features the Alter Esselin Archive. (Wikipedia, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Yiddish poetry. Light edge wear to boards. Very Good Condition overall. (YID-40-69-CFLX)
1st edition. Original modernist illustrated cloth cover, 8vo, 159, [1] pages ; 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as, "Lamentations of our Time." Holocaust-era Poetry. Inscribed by the author on front end paper. Features construtivist cover by Aron Gudelman, who is featured in Hillel Kozovskys CEtait lEpoque ou lOn a Commence a Illustrer les Livres Juifs, [appearing in French Translation in Futur antérieur: l'Avant-garde et le livre yiddish (1914-1939) , p. 47]. Aron Gudelman (Ataki, Bessarabia, 1890 - New York, 1978) was a sculptor, illustrator, etcher, lecturer, and teacher. Born in Russia, he immigrated to New York in 1905 at the time of pogroms in Russia. After attending the Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design, in 1914 he studied with Jean-Antoine Injalbert at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Supporting himself as a machinist in the 1920s, Goodelman became a communist. His concerns about social and economic conditions were expressed in his art. He participated in exhibitions at the John Reed Club in the early 1930s. After World War II, Goodelman created artworks related to the Holocaust. He taught at City College of New York in the 1960s (National Museum of American Art, 1996). Malka Lee (1904- 1976) "was an American poet and author. She is the author of Durkh Kindershe Oygn (Through the Eyes of Childhood), published in 1955 and dedicated to her family, who were killed by the Nazis in the shtetl of Monastrishtsh (now Monastyryska, Ukraine) in 1941, as well as six volumes of poetry in Yiddish, her mother tongue, much of it about her experience of observing the Holocaust from the safety of the United States" (Wikipedia). OCLC 11430181. Touch of wear, Very Good Condition, a beautiful inscribed copy (Yid-26-8C-AELX-'+) xx
1st edition. Original modernist illustrated cloth cover, 8vo, 159, [1] pages ; 22 cm. In Yiddish. Title translates as, "Lamentations of our Time." Holocaust-era Poetry. Inscribed by the author on front end paper. Features construtivist cover by Aron Gudelman, who is featured in Hillel Kozovskys CEtait lEpoque ou lOn a Commence a Illustrer les Livres Juifs, [appearing in French Translation in Futur antérieur: l'Avant-garde et le livre yiddish (1914-1939) , p. 47]. Aron Gudelman (Ataki, Bessarabia, 1890 - New York, 1978) was a sculptor, illustrator, etcher, lecturer, and teacher. Born in Russia, he immigrated to New York in 1905 at the time of pogroms in Russia. After attending the Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design, in 1914 he studied with Jean-Antoine Injalbert at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Supporting himself as a machinist in the 1920s, Goodelman became a communist. His concerns about social and economic conditions were expressed in his art. He participated in exhibitions at the John Reed Club in the early 1930s. After World War II, Goodelman created artworks related to the Holocaust. He taught at City College of New York in the 1960s (National Museum of American Art, 1996). Malka Lee (1904- 1976) "was an American poet and author. She is the author of Durkh Kindershe Oygn (Through the Eyes of Childhood), published in 1955 and dedicated to her family, who were killed by the Nazis in the shtetl of Monastrishtsh (now Monastyryska, Ukraine) in 1941, as well as six volumes of poetry in Yiddish, her mother tongue, much of it about her experience of observing the Holocaust from the safety of the United States" (Wikipedia). OCLC 11430181. Wear to edges of cover, about Very Good- Condition, a beautiful inscribed copy (Yid-26-8D-AELX-'+) xx
1st edition. Original boards. 8vo. 12 issues per year, each issue is 31 pages. 26 cm. April 1922-April 1923. Periodical ran from 1920-1951. Features Yiddish literature (generally short stories) , along with illustrations and songs. Edited by Beyle Schaechter-Gottesman (1920-2013) , the well-known American Yiddish poet and songwriter. Schaechter-Gottesman won the 2005 National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment of the Arts (the highest honor in the folk and traditional arts) . She was the first Yiddish poet to receive this honor (Wikipedia, 2019) . SUBJECTS: Children's literature, Yiddish -- Periodicals. Boards lightly faded. Issues are coming loose from boards. Pages browning but good. (YID-33-81)