-
wrote in the
Yiddish language. His name is also
spelled Yankev Glatshteyn or
Jacob Glatshteyn.
Glatstein was born in Lublin,
Poland at a time when Jews made...
- poem-****-song
written by
David Edelshtat, and
first scribed by
Yankev Glatshteyn. The song
combines themes of
Socialist Feminism with the
ideals of the...
-
Yiddish poetry. The most
important member of this
group was
Yankev Glatshteyn.
Glatshteyn was
interested in
exotic themes, in
poems that
emphasized the sound...
-
United States)
Jacob Glatstein (alternative
English spelling:
Yankev Glatshteyn)
Hirsh Glick Abraham Goldfaden Pincus Goodman Chaim Grade Eliezer Greenberg...
- to the song, the
first published version was
printed in 1919 by
Yankev Glatshteyn in Warsaw, in the book
Freiheits Lieder (Yiddish: פרײַהײַטס לידער, lit...
- for
financial reasons, at
which point Hirschbein published what
Jacob Glatshteyn (In tokh
genumen [Sum and Substance], 1976, p. 77) has
called "the four...
- Schwarz, Jan, "A
Poetics of
Retrieval and Loss:
Aaron Zeitlin and
Yankev Glatshteyn," chap. 6 of
Survivors and Exiles:
Yiddish Culture After the Holocaust...
-
Houdini Notable D. Dina
Friedman Escaping into the
Night Notable Yankev Glatshteyn,
translated by
Jeffrey Shandler Emil and Karl
Notable Kathy Kacer Hiding...
- 1915–1918 by Jim
Eldridge (2003) The
Storm to Come, Vienna, 1939 by
Yankev Glatshteyn (2010) U-Boat Hunter:
Peter Rogers, HMS Arum, 1939–1945 by
Bryan Perrett...
-
immigrant women. As
scholars have explained, the
Yiddish poet
Yankev Glatshteyn argued that the
perception of
Serdatzky as "angry" led to a lamentable...