Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader

Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader

Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader

Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader

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Overview

Winner of the 2013 New York Book Show Award in Scholarly/Professional Cover Design



Jewish Radicals explores the intertwined histories of Jews and the American Left through a rich variety of primary documents. Written in English and Yiddish, these documents reflect the entire spectrum of radical opinion, from anarchism to social democracy, Communism to socialist-Zionism. Rank-and-file activists, organizational leaders, intellectuals, and commentators, from within the Jewish community and beyond, all have their say. Their stories crisscross the Atlantic, spanning from the United States to Europe and British-ruled Palestine.





The documents illuminate in fascinating detail the efforts of large numbers of Jews to refashion themselves as they confronted major problems of the twentieth century: poverty, anti-semitism, the meaning of American national identity, war, and totalitarianism. In this comprehensive sourcebook, the story of Jewish radicals over seven decades is told for the first time in their own words.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814757444
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 07/09/2012
Series: Goldstein-Goren Series in American Jewish History , #14
Pages: 360
Sales rank: 1,117,508
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Tony Michels is George L. Mosse Associate Professor of American Jewish History at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He is the author of A Fire in Their Hearts: Yiddish Socialists in New York (2005).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Jewish-Socialist Nexus
Tony Michels
Part I: Awakenings
Abraham Bisno
Emma Goldman
Alexander Bittelman
Lucy Robins Lang
Paul Jacobs
Part II: In Struggle
Di nyu-yorker yidishe folkstsaytung
Dovid Edelshtat
Bernard Vaynshteyn
Di arbeter tsaytung
Women’s Societies
Alexander Berkman
Abraham Shiplacoff
Isadore Wisotsky
Rose Pastor Stokes
Abraham Cahan
Louis Waldman
Louis Michel
Justice
Sam Darcy
Upton Sinclair
The Nation
Women's Circle, Branch 417
Isadore Bernick
Frank Crosswaith
Jennie Cohen
J. B. S. Hardman
Part III: Life of the Mind
Ida Van Etten
Education Societies
Pauline Newman
Bernard G. Richards
Phillip Davis
New York Times
A. Faynman
B. Sheyfer
Oswald Garrison Villard
United Jewish Workers’ Cultural Society
International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union
N. Glass
United Council of Yiddish Women’s Reading Circles of Detroit
Nathan Ausubel
Part IV: The Russian Revolution
New York Times
Louis Waldman
Katherina Maryson
New York Times
Moissaye J. Olgin
Workers’ (Communist) Party; Roger Baldwin and Earl Browder
Nokhum Khanin
Max Granich
Vanguard
Paul Jacobs
The New International
Jewish Life
Part V: The Question of Zionism
Jacob Milch
Der yidisher kemfer
Randolph Bourne
Herts Burgin
The Forverts
Di morgn frayhayt
Hayim Greenberg
Samuel Weiss
Bezalel Sherman
Arthur Rosenberg
Ernest Mandel
Albert Glotzer
Alexander Bittelman
Recommended Reading
Index
About the Editor

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

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“This book will stimulate the mind and gladden the heart of anyone who cares about the history of American Jews or the American left and the always close, if eternally tempestuous relationship between them. Tony Michels has assembled a feast of documents and is an expert guide to their meaning and context.”

-Michael Kazin,author of American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation

"From America's leading historian of Yiddish-speaking radicalism comes this rich anthology of contemporary Jewish-American voices from the 1880s through the 1940s. Among the diverse experiences and points of view reflected here, Michels convincingly identifies three dominant threads Normal 0 MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Normal 0 MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 —socialist awakening as a rite-of-passage, the agony and ecstasy of political struggle, and Yiddish-based education as a labor-centered project with an uncertain agenda for national emancipation."

-Leon Fink,editor of Labor Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas

"[Michels] has made an important contribution to our understanding of [a] significant aspect of American Jewish history."-Buffalo Jewish Review,

"Recommended for upper-division undergraduates through researchers/faculty."-CHOICE

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