To the Other Shore :The Russian Jewish Intellectuals Who Came to America ( Princeton Legacy Library )

Publication subTitle :The Russian Jewish Intellectuals Who Came to America

Publication series :Princeton Legacy Library

Author: Cassedy Steven;;;  

Publisher: Princeton University Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781400864553

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780691029757

Subject: K7 Americas History

Keyword: 美洲史

Language: ENG

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Description

To the Other Shore tells the story of a small but influential group of Jewish intellectuals who immigrated to the United States from the Russian Empire between 1881 and the early 1920s--the era of "mass immigration." This pioneer group of Jewish intellectuals, many of whom were raised in Orthodox homes, abandoned their Jewish identity, absorbed the radical political theories circulating in nineteenth-century Russia, and brought those theories with them to America. When they became leaders in the labor movement in the United States and wrote for the Yiddish, Russian, and English-language radical press, they generally retained the secularized Russian cultural identity they had adopted in their homeland, together with their commitment to socialist theories.

This group includes Abraham Cahan, longtime editor of The Jewish Daily Forward and one of the most influential Jews in America during the first half of this century; Morris Hillquit, a founding figure of the American socialist movement; Michael Zametkin and his wife, Adella Kean, both journalists and labor activists in the early decades of this century; and Chaim Zhitlovsky, one of the most important Yiddish writers in modern times. These immigrants were part of the generation of Jewish intellectuals that preceded the better-known New York Intellectuals of the late 1920s and 1930s--the group chronicled in Irving Howe's World of Our Fathers.

In To the Other Shore, Steven Cassedy offe

Chapter

List of Illustrations

Preface

Introduction

2. "In Chernyshevsky's Kheyder": Being Nihilists

3. "Critically Thinking Individuals": Going to the People

4. "A Crisis of Identity": The Pogroms and After

Part 2

5. Coming to Shore

6. "We Are Russian Workers and Besides in America": Writing in Russian

7. "We Are Jews"-At Least, You Are: Writing in Yiddish

8. "We Are Americans": Writing in English

9. American Realism: Life, Thought, and Art

Conclusion

Notes

Index

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